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MMPZ regrets establishment of a disciplinary media council
The Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe
September 13, 2012
MMPZ notes with
regret the Zimbabwe Media Commission's decision to fulfil
its statutory obligation to set up a disciplinary media council,
whose mandate will be to develop and enforce a code of conduct and
ethics that will allow the Commission to punish offending journalists
and media institutions.
MMPZ is opposed
to the establishment of this Council on the grounds that it is an
instrument of the notorious Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA), which
continues to be used to stifle all media activity in Zimbabwe.
This Act purports
to regulate media activity, but in fact controls who can and cannot
practice journalism and criminalizes offenders. The establishment
of the media council will give the Commission additional powers
to punish registered journalists and media houses who violate an
as-yet-to-be-declared Code of Conduct. Such a repressive law severely
diminishes Zimbabweans' rights to freedom of expression and
is unnecessary in a democratic society. MMPZ is convinced that governments
have no role to play in controlling media activity and deciding
on codes of conduct for a country's media and communications
industry beyond a strictly administrative role because such laws
can - and are - used to suffocate debate and silence
critical voices in society. Zimbabwe has proved to be an outstanding
example of this "tyranny of thought" that has been imposed
on its citizens.
Perfectly adequate
defamation laws already exist that provide redress for those who
seek justice against media outlets that overstep their constitutional
rights to free expression. And the Voluntary
Media Council of Zimbabwe, set up by civil society and Zimbabwe's
progressive media community, already exists to adjudicate the constructive
resolution to disputes relating to the unprofessional conduct of
journalists and media institutions.
The council
being set up by the ZMC will serve no constructive purpose in Zimbabwe's
efforts to establish a true participatory democracy, and will, in
fact, simply add a new layer of bureaucracy and repression that
already suffocates Zimbabwe's media business.
For these reasons
MMPZ and its partners in civil society believe that real media reforms
- and even those envisaged under the Global
Political Agreement - cannot begin to be addressed without
the repeal of AIPPA in its entirety.
Visit the MMPZ
fact sheet
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