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Robert
Mugabe among the predators of freedom of information
Reporters
Sans Frontiers
May 03, 2012
http://en.rsf.org/predator-robert-mugabe,42479.html
It is thanks
to its president that Zimbabwe's privately-owned print media
are constantly harassed and that the state-owned Zimbabwe Broadcasting
Corporation (ZBC) has a monopoly of radio and TV broadcasting. Robert
Mugabe blocks everything, prevents the national unity government
from functioning properly, makes sure the independent media are
unable to express themselves freely and, with the help of his closest
aides, keeps the state media under tight control.
Mugabe stepped
up the pressure on the media after his government's electoral
setbacks in 2008. Editors were placed under electronic surveillance
to check their loyalty to the party, while opposition activists
were abducted and tried for "terrorist plots" in grotesque
trials.
Despite being
hailed as a "liberator" when he came to power in the
1980s, Mugabe has no problem with the arbitrary arrests and harassment
to which most of the country's journalists are exposed. In
2002, he was the architect of the Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA), the sole
aim of which was to finish off the privately-owned press, above
all The Daily News, then the country's most widely-read daily.
In 2012, "the old man" was preparing for the next elections
- for which a date has yet to be set - by continuing
to curtail free speech. While foreign news organizations are not
welcome, the harassment of local journalists continues.
A journalist
killed every five days, six new "predators" brings total
to 41
See the complete
list of predators: http://en.rsf.org/#trombiPredateur
Today, World
Press Freedom Day 2012, Reporters Without Borders condemns the furious
pace of physical attacks on news providers and reports that a total
of 21 journalists and 6 netizens and citizen journalists have been
killed since the start of 2012, many of them in war zones such as
Somalia and Syria. This is a rate of one news provider killed ever
five days.
Reporters Without
Borders is today also releasing an updated list of its "predators
of the freedom to inform," a list that has grown in size and
now has 41 members.
"Let there
be no witness to our crimes" and "let there be no voice
but ours" - these are the watchwords of authoritarian
regimes and armed groups that are hostile to freedom of information.
What with crackdowns on protest in Arab countries, and suppression
of political opposition, criticism and reporting in other parts
of the world, the first four months of 2012 were especially violent
for those who try to provide news and information.
New
predators of the freedom to inform
The first quarter
of 2012 has clearly shown that the world's predators of the
freedom to inform, led by Syria's Bashar Al-Assad and Somalia's
Islamist militias, are capable of behaving like outright butchers.
The 2011 revolts
toppled several despots who were on the predators list such as Libya's
Muammar Gaddafi and Yemen's Ali Abdallah Saleh but they unfortunately
did not reduce the overall number of these enemies of information.
Six new predators
have joined this evil "club" in 2012: Boko Haram, an
Islamist group that spreads terror in Nigeria; Egypt's Supreme
Council of the Armed Forces, which has regrettably taken over from
deposed dictator Hosni Mubarak as regards violating freedom of information;
the Somali federal government's information minister, who
is responsible for harassment and intimidation of the media; Vasif
Talibov, the all-powerful leader of Azerbaijan's "Autonomous
Republic" of Nakhchivan; Pakistan's intelligence agencies;
and Kim Jong-un, who perpetuated North Korea's predatory dictatorship
on the death of his father, King Jong-il.
There is a growing
trend for countries to have more than one predator. Six countries
now have two. Somalia has as the Islamist militia Al-Shabaab as
well as the information minister. Pakistan has the Taliban as well
as the intelligence agencies. Azerbaijan has President Ilham Aliev
as well as Nakhchivan's strongman, Talibov, who has turned
his fiefdom into a laboratory for the repressive methods that Aliev
applies in the rest of the country.
Russia not only
has Vladimir Putin but also his Chechen "guard-dog,"
Ramzan Kadyrov, who shares his master's taste for forceful
words and gestures. The Palestinian Territories have both the Palestinian
Authority in the West Bank and Hamas in Gaza, both of which use
their security forces to harass journalists. And finally, the Islamic
Republic of Iran has both Supreme Leader Khamenei and President
Ahmadinejad, who - despite their rivalry - agree on
gagging the media. Iran still ranks with Eritrea, China, Turkey
and Syria as one of the world's biggest prisons for journalists.
Other presidents,
such as Djibouti's Ismail Omar Guelleh, Sudan's Omar
al-Bashir and Uganda's Yoweri Museveni, could be added to
the predators list soon. Yemen, which had a particularly trying
2011, continues to be under close scrutiny since President Saleh's
departure. Burmese President Thein Sein, on the other hand, could
be removed from the list if he proves to be the president of reform
and democratization in 2012.
The Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) were on the list for many years,
like Colombia's paramilitary groups, which are still on it.
The FARC guerrillas were dropped from the list some time ago because
they cut back targeted actions against journalists. But now the
FARC are being blamed for French freelance journalist Roméo
Langlois' disappearance since 28 April, when FARC guerrillas
attacked a military anti-drug operation that Langlois was covering.
Reporters Without
Borders is following the case closely, and with the appropriate
caution, as the claim that Langlois has been kidnapped by the FARC
has not yet been clearly confirmed. But the organization intends
to use World Press Freedom Day to pay tribute to his professional
courage and to voice its support for his family and colleagues.
Vulnerability
of cameramen, news photographers and citizen journalists
Freelance journalists,
a growing number of whom are covering wars, have paid a high price
in the past four months. Reporters Without Borders pays particular
tribute to citizen journalists, the last bastion of the freedom
to inform when governments want to crush opposition without the
outside world looking on. Cameramen and news photographers are also
favourite targets for repressive regimes that understand only too
well the impact of images and their power of providing information.
In view of the
turmoil resulting from the Arab springs, Reporters Without Borders
has decided to accompany the region's new governments during
their progress towards democracy. After opening an office in Tunisia,
Reporters Without Borders is now about to open one in Libya to encourage
the government's efforts to build a free and pluralist press.
However, the Arab springs have fallen far short of keeping all their
promises and we must remain on our guard, on the one hand, for manipulative
attempts by new governments to brand protest movements as "terrorist"
and, on the other, for the anti-freedom tendencies of certain protest
groups.
Journalists'
safety and international agreements
Because of the
growing dangers to which journalists are exposed, Reporters Without
Borders:
- Urges the
news media to begin a debate about the protection of the stringers,
fixers and local journalists they use, and about the protection
of their sources and the people they interview.
- Calls on
governments to implement international provisions on the protection
of journalists in an effective manner. Five years after the UN
Security Council adopted Resolution 1738, a status report is urgently
needed on the specific steps taken to implement it. Governments
must accept their responsibilities and obligations under paragraphs
6 and 7 to do their utmost to prevent violations of international
humanitarian law against journalists and to end impunity for such
violations.
- Requests
a revision of the International Criminal Court's statutes
in order to provide specific protection for journalists, as a
special civilian category, similar to the specific protection
they provide for humanitarian workers.
- Urges governments
to quickly adopt the Plan of Action on the Safety of Journalists
and the Decision on The Safety of Journalists and the Issue of
Impunity that were drafted by UNESCO in March.
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