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U.S.
calls on Zimbabwe to lift media restrictions
US
Embassy, Harare
May 05, 2009
The United States
urged the government of Zimbabwe to lift restrictions on the media
to promote the free flow of information, as an independent media
watchdog called on the inclusive government to prioritize media
reform ahead of the constitution making process.
Speaking at
a reception to launch the "Lost Voices" exhibition to
mark World Press Freedom Day in Harare on Monday, U.S. Ambassador
to Zimbabwe, James McGee said a free and dynamic media remained
an important component of his country's bilateral relations
with Zimbabwe.
"Zimbabwe
stands at the door of incredible opportunity. The world is watching
to see if the country will open the door with a new commitment to
freedom of expression, freedom of speech and freedom of the press,"
said the U.S. Ambassador.
"The
world wants to know, I want to know and most importantly, Zimbabweans
have the right to know," said McGee.
Zimbabwe's
press freedom record has been a subject of international criticism.
In his statement on World Press Freedom Day, U.S. President Barack
Obama condemned the jailing or active harassment of journalists
in Zimbabwe, and other countries.
"In every
corner of the globe, there are journalists in jail or being actively
harassed: from Azerbaijan to Zimbabwe, Burma to Uzbekistan, Cuba
to Eritrea," said President Obama.
The "Lost
Voices" exhibition, a joint initiative of the U.S. Embassy's
Public Affairs Section and the Media
Monitoring Project (MMPZ), features reproductions from various
publications printed since Zimbabwe's independence in 1980.
Prominent among
these is The Daily News, which was first launched on March 31, 1999.
It was controversially banned in 2003 for allegedly operating without
a license after it lost Supreme Court challenges to the requirement
that it register with a government media regulatory agency.
This year WPF
Day comes at a time when the inclusive government considers an array
of reforms in the media sector. There have also been discussions
on constitutional reforms.
MMPZ called
on government to prioritize media reform ahead of the constitution
making process.
"We cannot
embark on a constitution making process before the media is reformed
because you need a free media to reach the people out there,"
said MMPZ board member, Beatrice Mtetwa.
Mtetwa also
emphasized the need to encourage professionalism in the publicly
funded media noting that journalists in these media 'had long
lost their voices.'
"What
gets published in the state media are not voices of journalists.
Those are voices of politicians," said Mtetwa.
"Those
of you who read the Sunday Mail in the early 80s under the editorship
of Willie Musarurwa will know that the Sunday Mail you read today
is not a Sunday Mail that is produced by journalists. The same applies
to the Chronicle when it was being edited by Geoffrey Nyarota,"
said Mtetwa who also called for the abolition of government ministries
that control media.
Other speakers
at the launch, which was also attended by government officials,
journalists and representatives of civil society organizations,
lamented what they described as "Zimbabwe's present
media waste land."
"Wasteland
it certainly is. When one looks at the voices here that once informed
Zimbabwean society, you get some idea of the losses we have suffered
over the last 10 years as government suffocated the right to freedom
of expression and the right to be informed," said Andy Moyse,
head of MMPZ, an independent media watchdog that works to promote
responsible journalism.
Deputy Minister
of Media, Information and Publicity, Jameson Timba said "there
is limited media freedom in Zimbabwe" but noted that "opportunities
to create plural voices do exist under the existing laws."
Timba cited amendments made to media laws enacted in January 10,
2008.
He said Zimbabwe
has the capacity to have more media in broadcasting including 31
local commercial radio stations and 60 district-based community-based
radio stations as well as an additional unallocated 13 medium wave
channels. He criticized continued threats and arrests of journalists
"We need
to shout loud enough and say that is not right for our country.
A free press and freedom of expression is a necessary for democracy
and that we must defend as a matter of principle," said Timba.
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