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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Index of articles on enforced disappearances in Zimbabwe
Concern
grows after more abductions of journalists
Reportes
Sans Frontiers
December 17, 2008
http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=29739
Reporters Without Borders
is very disturbed by the abduction of freelance photojournalist
Shadreck Manyere and attempted abduction of Obrian Rwafa, a reporter
with the state-owned Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC), in
separate incidents on 13 December, just 10 days after the kidnapping
of journalist and human rights activist Jestina Mukoko, who is still
missing.
"Whoever was responsible, these kidnapping were clearly designed
to sow terror among Zimbabwe's journalists, whose investigative
work is more indispensible than ever in the current social, economic
and public health situation," Reporters Without Borders said.
"The authorities must do everything possible to identify the
perpetrators and instigators and bring them to justice."
Also known as "Saddam," Manyere was seen for the last
time at a garage in Norton, 40 km west of Harare, on 13 December.
Sources close to Manyere said he had received a phone call from
someone asking to meet him. As he readily agreed, it is believed
he knew the caller. His family has not heard from him since then
and his mobile phone has been turned off.
His wife said that, the day after his disappearance, a group of
police officers went to the family's home and ransacked it.
Rwafa said he was outside his home on 13 December when unidentified
individuals accused him of lying about the situation in Zimbabwe,
began hitting him and forced him into a white car, which then drove
off. By wrestling with the driver, Rwafa forced the car off the
road and managed to escape. He said the attack seemed to have been
politically motivated as his assailants did not try to rob him.
He is currently in hospital with head injuries and bruising.
George Charamba, the permanent secretary for information and publicity
and President Robert Mugabe's spokesman, has meanwhile twice
threatened journalists working for foreign news media, which he
accuses of waging a propaganda war against the government.
In an interview for ZBC on 12 December, he accused the local bureau
of foreign news media of quoting President Mugabe of out context
when they reported that he said the government had "arrested"
the cholera outbreak. Charamba added that the government was not
obliged to accredit foreign news organisations under Zimbabwe's
press law, called the Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act.
He repeated his threats the next day in a column in the state-owned
daily The Herald, accusing the Reuters, AP and AFP news agencies
and the France 24, BBC and Al Jazeera TV news stations of "rewriting"
the news copy provided by their local staff to "suit their
nations' agendas." There would be a "robust response,"
he added.
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