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This article participates on the following special index pages:

  • Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles


  • Journalists barred from covering talks
    MISA-Zimbabwe
    October 28, 2008

    Several journalists were barred from covering the SADC Troika mediated talks held in Harare on 27 October 2008 as part of efforts to break the impasse over the allocation of ministerial positions in terms of the agreement for an inclusive government signed by Zanu PF and the two MDC formations.

    Security details manning the entrance to the premises of the Rainbow Towers Hotel where the talks were being held turned away a number of freelance journalists who are not accredited with the statutory Media and Information Commission (MIC) demanding they produce MIC accreditation cards for them to cover the national event.

    Accreditation of journalists by MIC is no longer compulsory following the December 2008 cosmetic amendments to the repressive Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA).

    Two weeks ago on 15 and 16 October 2008, an official from the Ministry of Information and Publicity approached two local foreign correspondents and ordered them to leave the same hotel where they were mingling with other journalists who were maintaining a journalistic vigil on the talks that were being facilitated by former South African President Thabo Mbeki. The official reportedly told the journalists that he was acting on instructions from his superiors.

    MISA-Zimbabwe position

    MISA-Zimbabwe calls upon the Parliament of Zimbabwe to repeal AIPPA as a matter of urgency as it poses serious violations to media freedom and freedom of expression and also vitiates against the 2002 Banjul Declaration on the Principles of Freedom of Expression in Africa which frowns upon statutory regulation of the media as is the case in Zimbabwe under the MIC.

    The Banjul Declaration states that self-regulation is the best system of instilling professionalism in the media. MISA-Zimbabwe reiterates that journalists have the professional mandate to cover and report on the country's socio-economic and political developments as they unfold without any hindrance.

    Visit the MISA-Zimbabwe fact sheet

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