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Two
Standard journalists arrested on libel charge in new threat to independent
media
Reporters
Sans Frontiers
June 30, 2011
http://en.rsf.org/zimbabwe-two-standard-journalists-arrested-30-06-2011,40564.html
Reporters Without
Borders condemns yesterday's arrest
of Nevanji Madanhire, the editor of independent weekly The Standard,
and Patience Nyangove, one of his reporters, and the charges of
criminal defamation and "publication of false statements prejudicial
to the state" that have been brought against them.
"This latest case of judicial harassment of
The Standard's journalists shows that government officials
want to censor independent media," Reporters Without Borders
said. "By criminalizing newspaper articles, officials are
trying to cover up the recent tension between the two parties in
the ruling coalition, President Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF and
Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC). Designed to get outspoken media to censor themselves,
these arrests and charges are unacceptable. We fear they are a prelude
to more arrests of independent journalists."
Madanhire, Nyangove and Loud Ramakgapola, the human
resources director of Alpha Media, the company that owns The Standard,
were arrested during a raid yesterday on the newspaper by members
of the Law and Order section of the Central Intelligence Department.
Nyangove and Ramakgapola were released yesterday evening, but Madanhire
was held overnight at Harare police headquarters and was due to
be brought before a judge late today.
The arrests
were prompted by an article in The Standard's 26 June issue
headlined "MDC-T fears for missing Timba's life."
It was about the arrest
of Jameson Timba, a senior aide to Tsvangirai and a minister
of state in his government, on 24 June on his return to Zimbabwe
after attending a special Southern African Development Community
summit on 11-12 June in South
Africa.
During the summit, a South African newspaper quoted
Timba as describing Mugabe as a "liar." Leading Zanu-PF
member Jonathan Moyo reacted by accusing Timba and Tsvangirai of
insulting the president and calling for their arrest. Zimbabwean
journalists who reported these developments are being accused of
violating article 31 of the criminal code on defaming the government.
Reporters Without Borders has learned that several
other leading journalists are threatened with the possibility of
arrest at Zanu-PF's behest. Journalists with the Daily News
and Zimbabwe Independent who wrote similar articles are also reportedly
being accused of trying to tarnish the president's image.
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