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Newspaper
editor arrested in Harare, shortwave radio sets seized in rural
areas
Reporters
Sans Frontiers
December 01, 2010
http://en.rsf.org/zimbabwe-newspaper-editor-arrested-in-01-12-2010,38935.html
Reporters Without
Borders is very disturbed by yesterday's arrest
of Nevanji Madanhire, the editor of the Harare-based weekly The
Standard, and calls for his immediate release.
The press freedom organization condemns the threatening
methods being used by the police and the climate of fear they have
created for Zimbabwean journalists. We regret that freedom of opinion
is being gagged in this manner in the run-up to next year's
elections and at a time when President Robert Mugabe has made it
clear he wants to put an end to the coalition government.
Madanhire's
arrest came four days after his correspondent in the southwestern
city of Bulawayo, Nqobani Ndlovu, was freed
at a judge's behest from Khami prison, where he had been held
for nine days. An earlier Reporters Without Borders release condemned
Ndlovu's arrest on 17 November for an article questioning
the probity of the local police .
The Harare police initially tried to arrest Madanhire
on 29 November, when they went with a warrant to Alpha Media Holdings,
the company that owns The Standard, but Madanhire, who had been
in hiding for the previous 10 days, was not there.
Accompanied by his lawyer, he turned himself into
the police the next day and is now held at Rhodesville police station
in Harare, where he is being questioned by members of the "Law
and Order" section of the Criminal Investigation Department.
Reporters Without Borders has also learned that
the police in rural areas have for some time been confiscating shortwave
radio sets from people caught listening to programmes made by Zimbabwean
journalists in exile. The press freedom organization firmly condemns
the use of such methods to censor information and restrict individual
freedom. They must stop at once, and the sets must be returned to
their owners.
NGOs recently
distributed shortwave radio sets to rural residents to enable them
to receive alternative radio programmes broadcast from abroad. Studio
7, Radio VOP
(Voice of the People) and Shortwave Radio Africa - broadcast
from Washington, South Africa and London, respectively - have
around 1 million listeners. Studio 7 contributed to the distribution
of radio sets so that people could listen to something other than
the pro-government Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC).
Five homes in Bikita West, in the province of Masvingo,
were raided on 25 November and radio sets were seized. Norbert Chinyike
and Charles Mhizha, two supporters of the Movement for Democratic
Change (the former opposition party currently in a shaky coalition
with Mugabe's ZANU-PF), were arrested after radio sets were
found in their possession. They were later released without being
charged.
Shortly before that, police searched the offices
of the NGO Democratic Councils Forum in Gweru and arrested an employee
after discovering radio sets that were awaiting distribution in
the countryside.
Jastone Mazhale, the president of the Gwanda Agenda
pressure group, said police inspected his offices and questioned
him about radio sets. He said they told him they were acting on
orders from police headquarters in Harare.
Radio sets that been distributed to rural residents
by NGOs were seized by police in Mashonaland East on 27 October.
A representative of the human rights group ZimRights
said police accompanied by members of the Central Intelligence Organisation
(CIO) carried out an operation in Murehwa district, confiscating
radio sets that had been distributed by NGOs and threatening the
residents who were found with them.
National police spokesman Wayne Bvudzijena said
he was unaware of such incidents but promised to make enquiries.
"We condemn this large-scale censorship campaign
being carried out in rural areas of the country where access to
news is already limited and where the authorities deliberately try
to keep the media presence to a minimum," Reporters Without
Borders secretary-general Jean-François Julliard said.
"These
measures are designed to limit the population's access to
freely-reported news and to ensure that the views expressed by pro-government
media are not challenged by the views of independent and opposition
media," Julliard added. "This is an attack on media
diversity."
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