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Former
minister sues Daily News over stories quoting WikiLeaks cables
Reporters
Sans Frontiers
September 16, 2011
http://en.rsf.org/zimbabwe-former-minister-sues-daily-news-16-09-2011,41009.html
Reporters Without
Borders condemns former information minister Jonathan Moyo's
continuing judicial harassment of the Harare-based independent newspaper,
the Daily News, and the company that publishes it, Associated Newspapers
of Zimbabwe.
In a lawsuit
filed this week naming editor Stanley Gama and reporter Thelma Chikwanha,
Moyo is demanding 100,000 US dollars in damages for stories by Chikwanha
on 6 and 7 September quoting comments which - according to
US diplomatic cables released a few days before by WikiLeaks -
Moyo made to US diplomats in Harare.
"The Daily
News just reported, and commented on, reliable information that
is now accessible to everyone through WikiLeaks," Reporters
Without Borders said. "Its reporters did a serious piece of
investigative journalism based on information that is clearly embarrassing
but is now out in the open.
"Annoyed
by the publication of his confidential comments, Moyo is singling
out a local newspaper he has never liked. His accusations are grave
and without foundation, and the amount of damages he is demanding
is exorbitant. He is trying to deter journalists from doing their
job and to throttle the newspaper financially."
In its 6 September
story, headlined "Moyo's plans to oust Mugabe,"
the Daily News reported that, in conversations with US diplomats,
Moyo had voiced support for travel and economic sanctions by the
United States and other western countries against President Robert
Mugabe, who he said now had throat cancer, and members of his inner
circle.
In its article
the next day, headlined "Moyo advised US on Zanu-PF sanctions
list," the newspaper reported that Moyo had even suggested
which senior members of the ruling Zanu-PF party should be targeted
by the sanctions.
Moyo has confirmed
that he met with US diplomats and has not denied the comments attributed
to him in the cables released by WikiLeaks. Instead, his lawsuit
takes issue with the way the newspaper used this information. Certain
sections of the articles were "wrongful, unlawful, false,
scandalous and defamatory," Moyo said.
Moyo claims
that the newspaper misrepresented his position by suggesting he
played a leading role in enlarging the list of sanction targets,
as well as making him appear dishonest and hypocritical in the government's
eyes. The court has given the newspaper 10 days to say whether it
intends to defend the suit. A Daily News representative told Reporters
Without Borders the newspaper stood by its articles.
Last May, shortly
after the Daily News resumed publishing after a seven-year ban,
Moyo sued the newspaper for 60,000 dollars for reprinting old articles
about his expulsion from Zanu-PF in 2005.
The latest suit
was filed the same week that the minister of media, information
and publicity, Webster Shamu, warned foreign and privately-owned
news media that the government would withdraw their licences if
they continued their "vitriolic attacks and the use of hate
language" against President Mugabe.
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