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Attacks
on the Press in 2008: Zimbabwe
Committee
to Protect Journalists
February 10, 2009
http://cpj.org/2009/02/attacks-on-the-press-in-2008-zimbabwe.php
President Robert Mugabe
and his ZANU-PF party, startled by balloting that threatened their
28-year rule, unleashed a brutal crackdown on opposition supporters
and the press. Veteran journalist Geoff Hill described the weeks
between the first round of voting in March and a runoff in June
as "the worst time for journalists in Zimbabwe's history,"
a view expressed by numerous foreign and local reporters.
Mugabe, who appeared
to have lost the March 29 election, emerged the victor in the violence-plagued
runoff three months later as ZANU-PF supporters orchestrated a vicious
campaign against people sympathetic to the opposition Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC). About 100 people died in the violence.
During the election period, police and security officers used obsolete
media laws to jail at least 16 journalists and media support workers—a
wave of detentions without precedent in Zimbabwean history—and
harass and obstruct at least 23 more, according to CPJ research.
The nationwide press crackdown targeted anyone involved with the
media: distributors, lawyers who defended journalists, and state
broadcasters considered "disloyal" to the ruling party.
Facing international condemnation, Mugabe reached a power-sharing
agreement with Morgan Tsvangirai in September, but the deal was
tenuous in late year and press advocates lamented that it did little
to address media repression.
The creation of a unity
government was stalled over control of key ministerial posts, including
defense, finance, and home affairs. The political situation bordered
on farcical: Tsvangirai held the title of prime minister but could
not gain access to his own passport. Tragedy, it seemed, was around
every corner for suffering Zimbabweans. The economy spiraled out
of control as the official inflation rate hit 231 million percent,
according to news reports. By December, the country's situation
had deteriorated to the point that soldiers rioted and looted shops,
and more than 1,000 people had died of cholera by U.N. estimates.
The U.N. World Food Program estimated that half of the Zimbabwean
population would need food assistance by 2009.
Press freedom organizations
and local journalists criticized the power-sharing deal for not
addressing the pressing need to reform Zimbabwe's media laws.
While the agreement contained a provision acknowledging the importance
of free expression and encouraging development of private broadcasters,
no specific reform measures were outlined. The Broadcasting Services
Act prohibits foreign funding or ownership in the broadcasting sector,
effectively blocking development of private broadcasters given Zimbabwe's
economic devastation.
Few independent media
have operated in the country in recent years, the result of long-running
government restrictions. State radio and television dominated the
landscape, filling airtime with propaganda supporting the ruling
party and vilifying the opposition. No independent daily newspapers
and no private broadcast outlets were in operation, and only two
prominent independent weeklies continued to publish. Most independent
news coverage was provided by exiled Zimbabwean journalists who
operated foreign-based Web sites and radio stations based in London,
Washington, and South Africa. A small handful of South African newspapers
circulated in Zimbabwe.
Ironically, Mugabe's
government acted in January to relax media laws that had been considered
among the world's most restrictive. In talks with the Southern
Africa Development Community, a regional trade and security organization,
the administration agreed to amend the Access to Information and
Protection of Privacy Act, a repressive accreditation law that effectively
enabled the government to determine who could and could not report
the news. The amendments, passed by parliament, ostensibly allowed
Zimbabwean reporters to work without accreditation and eased entry
into the country for international journalists. But the government
largely ignored the changes, barring most foreign journalists from
entering the country for the election and continuing to enforce
the obsolete accreditation provisions. In the run-up to the balloting,
the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission denied entry to international
media such as the BBC, CNN, Sky News, and South Africa's e.tv.
In at least 19 cases documented by CPJ, police used outdated sections
of the accreditation law to harass, obstruct, or detain journalists.
New York Times reporter
Barry Bearak was among those arrested under the outdated accreditation
law. "One of my captors, Detective Inspector Dani Rangwani,
described my offense to me as something despicable," said
Bearak, who was detained for five days. "I was being charged
with the crime of committing journalism." Human rights lawyer
Beatrice Mtetwa, recipient of CPJ's 2008 Burton Benjamin Memorial
Award, won a dismissal of charges against Bearak. Her organization,
Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights, took the lead in defending journalists,
winning numerous other dismissals. In the face of massive repression
by the executive branch, the country's court system demonstrated
a degree of independence. CPJ research shows that at least 16 criminal
cases against journalists were dismissed outright by the courts
and that no journalist was ultimately jailed longer than one month.
As documented in CPJ's
June special report, "Bad to Worse in Zimbabwe," the
ruling party's press crackdown was a nationwide phenomenon.
At least half of the press freedom violations documented by CPJ
occurred in the rural countryside. ZANU-PF supporters intimidated
potential news sources in rural areas, making it very difficult
for journalists to conduct interviews or gather information. "We
can't go to rural areas to do violence stories as we were
able in early April," said Peta Thornycroft, a Zimbabwean
reporter for the London-based Daily Telegraph. "We would bring
danger to people who are already in danger. Several contacts have
sent messages to us not to come."
In the suburban towns
of Mabvuku and Tafara, ruling party militia assaulted people who
were simply reading the private weekly The Standard, the paper reported.
In villages in southern Zimbabwe, militias forcefully removed satellite
dishes that picked up regional broadcasts from southern Africa.
As the run-off election
neared in June, the government obstructed international newspapers
by imposing import duties and surcharges of up to 60 percent. For
The Zimbabwean, an independent weekly printed in South Africa, the
charges totaled 140,000 South African rand (US$17,500) per issue,
said the paper's U.K.-based editor, Wilf Mbanga. The government
also imposed price limits on single-copy sales, forcing independent
papers to sell at below-market rates. The Zimbabwean endured direct
interference as well. In May, suspected security personnel hijacked
a truck delivering The Zimbabwean in the southeastern town of Masvingo,
beat the drivers, and set fire to the truck with 60,000 copies inside.
A court case against
The Standard's editor, Davison Maruziva dragged on throughout
the year. Maruziva spent a night in Harare police custody for publishing
a critical April 19 opinion piece written by an MDC splinter group
leader, Arthur Mutambara. Maruziva was charged under the oppressive
Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Act, which forbids publication
of information deemed prejudicial to the state. The case was sent
to the Supreme Court in late year. Even uttering a critical remark
about Mugabe is a criminal offense under this law. Defense lawyer
Harrison Nkomo was arrested in May for purportedly making an insulting
statement about Mugabe outside Harare's High Court. At the
time, Nkomo was defending freelance journalist Frank Chikowore who
was caught covering an MDC protest rally in one of Harare's
suburbs. The case against Nkomo was dropped after Mtetwa challenged
its constitutionality; the case against Chikowore was also dismissed.
In May, the ruling party
targeted state journalists who were considered insufficiently supportive,
firing Henry Muradzikwa, chief executive of the state Zimbabwe Broadcasting
Corporation (ZBC), and suspending seven employees. Presidential
spokesman George Charamba soon directed state media outlets to block
MDC campaign advertisements and pro-opposition editorials, according
to news reports. Happison Muchechetere, the Mugabe loyalist named
as the new state media CEO, ensured pro-Mugabe programming. By June's
end, state media aired only pro-ZANU-PF advertisements and gave
limited coverage of the countrywide political violence, the independent
Media Monitoring Project of Zimbabwe reported.
Harassment and detentions
of journalists subsided after post-election mediation, although
state media continued to broadcast anti-MDC rhetoric and police
brutality was still being reported. In July, Associated Press photographer
Tsvangirai Mukwazhi was severely beaten by police at his home in
Harare and temporarily detained at the Southerton Police Station,
journalists told CPJ. Police accused the photographer of "bringing
the country into disrepute," but did not lodge charges against
him.
The country's economic
wreckage further weakened the independent press. Fewer independent
newspapers were distributed as this harsh environment led to shortages
in equipment and newsprint, said The Standard Publisher Raphael
Khumalo. In the meantime, the government continued to provide subsidies
to state media.
Read more from
the 2008 report at
http://cpj.org/attacks/
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