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Three
independent dailies to be allowed to resume publishing after being
closed for years
Reporters
Sans Frontiers
May 27, 2010
http://en.rsf.org/zimbabwe-three-independent-dailies-to-be-27-05-2010,37577.html
Reporters Without Borders
is very pleased to learn that the Zimbabwe Media Council (ZMC) announced
yesterday that it has decided to grant licences to three privately-owned
dailies, allowing them to resume publishing.
"The decision to grant licences to these three newspapers
is a major advance for a country that has been without independent
daily newspapers for more than six years," Reporters Without
Borders said. "Justice has been rendered to the journalists
who were forced to remain silent for such a long time, and to the
Zimbabwean people, who had access only to government-controlled
news."
The press freedom organisation added: "We hope the authorities
will now issue these licences and allow these newspapers to work
freely. We call on the government to go further by quickly amending
the media laws."
NewsDay managing editor Moses Mudzwiti told Reporters Without Borders
he was "very happy" with the announcement. "We
have been waiting for this for nearly two years and we still cannot
quite believe it, it's so good. We should officially obtain
our licence today or tomorrow and we envisage publishing daily within
10 days, by the start of June."
Zimbabwe Media Council chairperson Godfrey Majonga announced last
night that licences would be granted to all the privately-owned
newspapers that had applied for them. They include three independent
dailies - The Daily News, owned by Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe
(ANZ); NewsDay, owned by Alpha Media, which already publishes the
weeklies The Zimbabwe Independent and The Standard; and The Daily
Gazette, owned by Modus Publications, which publishes The Financial
Gazette.
A licence is also to be given to a fourth daily, The Mail, owned
by Fruitlink, a company linked to the Youth Empowerment Fund, which
supports President Robert Mugabe's party, Zanu-PF.
ANZ also plans to resume publishing its weekly, The Daily News on
Sunday, while The Worker, a monthly published by the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions, will become a weekly.
The Daily News, which received the Reporters Without Borders, Fondation
de France press freedom prize in December 2003, has been banned
since 12 September 2003.
Reporters Without Borders made a special trip to Harare from 20
to 23 March to support the independent media's efforts to
obtain licences, visiting the closed newspapers and meeting several
government officials including Jameson Timba, who is the deputy
minister of media and information and an adviser to the prime minister.
During the trip, the press freedom organisation urged the government
to quickly foster a more favourable climate for free expression
by privately-owned independent newspapers. It also urged the ZMC
to immediately issue licences to newspapers that requested them.
Read the report of the Reporters Without Borders visit, entitled
"Mix of hope and resignation about return of independent press",
and watch the video "The independent press is waiting"
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