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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Index of articles on enforced disappearances in Zimbabwe
Regional
body asked to intercede on behalf of imprisoned woman journalist
Reporters
Sans Frontiers
January 09, 2009
http://www.rsf.org/print.php3?id_article=29934
Reporters Without Borders
wrote today to Tomaz Salamao, the executive secretary of the Southern
African Development Community (SADC), urging his regional organisation
to put pressure on President Robert Mugabe's government to
release journalist and human rights activist Jestina Mukoko as soon
as possible.
The letter accuses the
Zimbabwean courts of doing everything possible to prolong the detention
of Mukoko, who has been mistreated and tortured since her arrest
on 3 December with the result that her health has deteriorated considerably.
"The judicial proceedings
being brought against Mukoko and her fellow defendants are a sham,
their rights have been flouted and their health is in danger,"
Reporters Without Borders said. "The judges supervising the
proceedings are clearly taking their orders from Zimbabwe's
political authorities, who are persecuting opposition activists
in an unprecedented manner that is liable to scupper the power-sharing
agreement."
Magistrate Olivia Mariga
postponed Mukoko's trial again on 6 January, meaning that
she will have to remain in pre-trial custody until 14 January at
least, despite the fact that a high court judge ordered her transfer
to hospital on 24 December. Mariga blamed this latest postponement
on the defence's insistence on seeking compliance with the
high court ruling.
It was on 24 December
that Mukoko was first brought before a Harare court together with
other activists. She was brought before a judge again on 5 January,
when a 24-hour postponement was ordered.
She and the other activists,
who are being held in Chikurubi high security prison, are charged
with hatching a "terrorist plot" against President Mugabe.
They are alleged to have recruited volunteers to receive military
training in Botswana with a view to ousting Mugabe. Mukoko has been
put in solitary confinement.
According to her lawyer,
Beatrice Mtetwa, she is being denied her medicine and her health
is very worrying. Mukoko says she has been mistreated and tortured
since her arrest. Security agents allegedly kicked her and hit her
several times with sharp instruments, including on the soles of
her feet, and made her kneel naked on gravel.
A former programme
presenter for the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation and then the
privately-owned Voice of The People, Mukoko now heads the Zimbabwe
Peace Project, a human rights organisation that has provided
constant information about this year's political violence
in Zimbabwe. She was kidnapped from her home in Norton (40 km west
of Harare) on 3 December by some 15 men in plain clothes.
Shadreck Manyere, a freelance
press photographer who was kidnapped on 13 December, was meanwhile
brought before a Harare court on 7 January on charges of banditry,
sabotage and terrorism, for which he faces a prison sentence ranging
from 20 years to life. The authorities accuse him of involvement
in the bombings of the Criminal Investigations Department headquarters
in Harare and Manyame bridge in Norton on 17 November and the bombing
of Harare central police station on 20 November.
Reporters Without
Borders also condemns the government's decision to raise
the fees for foreign media accreditation, which has made visiting
Zimbabwe prohibitively expensive for foreign freelance journalists,
especially African ones. They will now have to pay more than 10,000
US dollars to be allowed to work in the country.
The increase is indicative
of the contempt the government feels towards the press in general,
and the international media in particular, and its desire to engineer
a news blackout about political, economic and public health developments
in Zimbabwe.
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