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London-based
exile radio station's broadcasts jammed in Harare
Reporters
Sans Frontiers
September 07, 2010
Reporters Without Borders
condemns the jamming of some of the programmes of Short Wave Radio
Africa (SWRA), a London-based radio station staffed by Zimbabwean
exile journalists that broadcasts to Zimbabwe. Various sources said
they thought Zimbabwe's Central Intelligence Organisation
(CIO) was responsible for the interference, which began on 1 September.
"While the licences
granted to several independent publications last May improved media
diversity after years of a state media monopoly, the jamming of
this exile radio station is an extremely negative sign," Reporters
Without Borders said. "The relaxation seen in the print media
is clearly not on the cards for the broadcast media. We urge the
national unity government to clarify this situation without delay
and to guarantee the right of access to information."
The first 30 minutes
of SWRA's programming on the evening 1 September, a news programme
called Newsreel, was rendered inaudible by interference which stopped
as soon as the news programme ended. The jamming of Newsreel has
been repeated several times since then.
President Robert Mugabe's
government used Chinese equipment to jam SWRA, Voice of America's
Studio 7 and Radio Voice of the People (VOP) in 2005. The president
regarded them as pirate stations that were broadcasting to Zimbabwe
with the sole aim of overthrowing him.
Five years before that,
Zimbabwe's supreme court ruled in favour of SWRA, then called
Capital Radio, when it challenged the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation's
broadcasting monopoly. The police had shut Capital Radio down six
days after it began broadcasting from a Harare hotel.
In a separate
case, artist Owen Maseko is facing a possible 20-year jail sentence
on a charge of "communicating falsehoods in order to incite
violence" for organising an exhibition on the so-called Gukurahundi
massacres that took place shortly after Zimbabwe gained independence.
On 27 August, the government announced a ban on any film, publication
or artistic work about the Gukurahundi.
"This
retrograde measure shows that some sectors of the Zimbabwean government
still tend to react in a paranoid fashion and are clearly not ready
to tolerate free expression about events that are part of the country's
history," Reporters Without Borders said, calling for the
withdrawal of the charges against Maseko.
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