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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Index of articles on enforced disappearances in Zimbabwe
Police
swoop on Zimind offices
The
Standard (Zimbabwe)
May 11, 2009
http://www.thezimbabwestandard.com/local/20357-police-swoop-on-zimind-offices.html
The officers,
acting on the orders of Detective Chief Inspector Ntini, said they
had been sent to arrest Vincent Kahiya and Constantine Chimakure,
Editor and News Editor respectively, over a story published on Friday
naming Central Intelligence Organisation officers and police officers
who were allegedly involved in the abduction of human rights and
MDC activists in November last year.
Three officers
-- Inspectors Mukwaira (030805H), Justein (045073R), and Kambizi
(045121T) told Zimind Group Chief Executive Officer Raphael Khumalo
they had been sent to arrest Kahiya and Chimakure. Zimbabwe Independent
staff do not work on Saturdays.
Ntini told
Khumalo the two were wanted for questioning for publishing the names
of the officers behind abductions of MDC and human rights activists
last year.
In his conversation
with Ntini over the phone Khumalo defended the paper's position
saying the story was based on court records and that there was no
basis for seeking Kahiya and Chimakure's arrest.
The information
had been supplied by the Attorney-General's office as part of the
notices of indictment for trial served on the MDC and civic activists
and was therefore in the public domain.
Khumalo
told Ntini the company would not hesitate to expose such continued
harassment of the media to show the world that such violations are
continuing even under the new political dispensation.
"The
attempt to arrest Kahiya and Chimakure amounts to harassment,"
Khumalo said, "at a time when the government is holding a media
reform conference to put an end to this sort of thing. The episode
shows there has been no change in the role of the police."
The Kariba
conference, part of a government charm offensive, began on Thursday
but was poorly attended after many journalists and media organisations
boycotted the event in protest against the detention of journalist,
Shadreck Andrisson Manyere.
Journalists
grouped under the Media
Alliance of Zimbabwe stayed away from the meeting because Manyere,
who is facing banditry and terrorism charges, had not been released
from prison.
The journalists
said it was impossible for them to attend a conference when one
of their own was under detention using the same repressive laws
that are meant to be under discussion.
They were
also protesting against the inclusion of what they referred to as
"media hangmen" on the programme.
Among those lined up to speak were former chairman of the Media
and Information Commission Tafataona Mahoso and former information
minister Jonathan Moyo, fingered as the brains behind the notorious
Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act and the Public
Order and Security Act. But Moyo did not attend.
National chairman of the Media
Institute of Southern Africa - Zimbabwe Chapter -- Loughty Dube
said media boycotted the event because government had reneged on
its promise to release Manyere as previously agreed.
Dube said the Deputy Minister of Media, Information and Publicity,
Jameson Timba had assured them when they met last Tuesday that Manyere
would be released the following day.
"We
felt that we could not go and negotiate when our members are being
persecuted," said Dube. "We are not against the media
reform process but what we want is a reformed media environment."
He said journalists who attended the conference went to Kariba in
their individual capacities. Zimbabwe
Union of Journalists (ZUJ) president Matthew Takaona was among
those who attended the conference.
Takaona
said while ZUJ does not condone the arrest of journalists by government,
it was necessary for media practitioners to attend the conference.
"If
journalists had not come here completely, it was going to be a disaster
in terms of the recommendations that are going to come out,"
he said.
Other journalists
who attended the meeting were Financial Gazette Editor Hama Saburi,
Cris Chinaka of Reuters, media consultant Bornwell Chakaodza and
journalist-cum-politician Kindness Paradza.
The conference
recommended that Aippa be replaced with a Freedom of Information
Act and a Media Practitioners' Registration Act which will make
registration of journalists a formality.
It also
recommended that the Zimbabwe Media Commission be constituted as
soon as possible. The commission should be a transitional body,
it was said, which when the constitutional reform process is started
will give way to self-regulation in the profession.
The conference
said government must support self-regulation, foreign investors
should only be able to take up 49% in local media, criminal defamation
should be repealed, cross-ownership of media disallowed and government
should assist in the formation of a National Employment Council
(NEC) for journalists.
It was
also suggested that the ZBC board be appointed by Parliament to
make it a fully public broadcaster.
No foreign investors in community radio stations should be permitted
but donations would be acceptable and the President and the Prime
Minister would not be "insulted".
Last week's re-detention of Zimbabwe
Peace Project director Jestina Mukoko and Manyere's continued
incarceration triggered the initial move to boycott the conference.
Although Mukoko was released last Wednesday along with other political
detainees, Manyere remained detained along with Tsvangirai's former
personal assistant Gandhi Mudzingwa and MDC director of security
Chris Dhlamini.
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