|
Back to Index
Zimbabwe
still a difficult place for media despite improvements
Tendai Maphosa, VOA
News
October 22, 2008
http://www.voanews.com/english/2008-10-22-voa36.cfm
The annual Reporters
Without Borders index says Zimbabwe's media lies in ruins and that
life has become impossible for independent journalists.
The 2008 report of the
Paris-based media lobby group says there were fewer press violations
in 2007, because it says there are not many journalists left to
arrest. It adds the few privately-owned publications that still
appear, do so under tight surveillance.
The report lists cases
of Zimbabwean journalists arrested for doing their work during 2007.
It mentions the disrupted prayer meeting when opposition leader
Morgan Tsvangirai was arrested and brutally beaten up by the police.
Free-lance cameraman
Edward Chikomba was found dead two weeks after the Tsvangirai beating.
He was accused of being responsible for selling footage of a bruised
and battered Tsvangirai to the international media.
The report says
although amendments to the Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act have liberalized
the media environment in Zimbabwe, the state continues to harass
those it describes as agents of the West.
Zimbabwe
Union of Journalists president, Matthew Takaona, tells VOA the
amendments to the Act, which became law in 2002 did not stop the
harassment of journalists during the election campaigns earlier
this year. He conceded things have eased somewhat since the June
27 presidential election runoff and the signing of the power-sharing
agreement last month.
He says, for instance,
journalists do not have to apply for a license to go about their
work. Prior to the amendments, a journalist who operated without
a license risked a two-year jail term. The license may not be a
requirement anymore, but Takaona says there is a catch.
"You cannot access public places like government functions
if you do not have an accreditation card, but anywhere else you
can practice," he said.
Another amendment abolishes
the Media and Information Commission, which regulated the activities
of the media since 2002. The government appointed commission was
responsible for issuing licenses to journalists and media organizations.
In its place will be a media commission, which is still to be set
up by parliament.
Takaona says his union
does not see this as an improvement.
"The media commission
can be just another Media and Information Commission because it
will be one of the arms of government that can be used to regulate
the media we have said as the necessary for the media in any democratic
society to be regulated by the state or by government but there
must be self regulation. So it might still be the same Media and
Information Commission but in a different jacket," he said.
Since the passing of
the Access to Information and Privacy Act, newspapers have been
banned and there are no independent dailies in Zimbabwe. The government
also has a monopoly on the electronic media.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|