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Wave
of harassment of independent journalists
Reporters
Sans Frontiers
October 17, 2012
http://en.rsf.org/zimbabwe-wave-of-harassment-of-independent-17-10-2012,43547.html
Reporters Without Borders is alarmed by a recent wave of arrests
of journalists in Zimbabwe and urges the authorities to stop trying
to intimidate independent privately-owned media and to take measures
against those responsible for physical attacks on reporters.
"This sudden
wave of lawsuits and incidents involving the police does not bode
well for the coming months," Reporters Without Borders said.
"Journalists must be guaranteed the freedom to cover political
stories without fear of abusive criminal prosecutions. We are very
worried about the judicial harassment of independent journalists
and media in the past few weeks."
The latest incident
was on 13 October when two reporters for the privately-owned Daily
News on Sunday, Tendai Kamhungira and Bethule Nkiwane, were threatened
and attacked by the
bodyguards of visiting South African politician Julius Malema, the
former head of the ruling ANC's youth wing, when they tried
to interview him.
The bodyguards
forced them to delete the photos they had taken to illustrate their
report and then seized their camera's memory card. A complaint
has been filed with the police.
Five days before
that, on 8 October, Daily News editor Stanley Gama and deputy editor
Chris Goko were briefly arrested in connection with a report claiming
that parliamentarian Munyaradzi Kereke may have faked his family's
abduction for political purposes.
The arrests
followed a series of threats by Kereke in recent weeks against the
two journalists, who are now facing criminal libel charges and a
demand for the absurd sum of 25 million dollars in damages.
Another journalist,
Kudakwashe Matura, was arrested on a libel charge on 8 September
in connection with a report in the Kariba News newsletter and is
due to appear before a criminal court on 19 October.
The police raided
the premises of African Open Media Initiative (Afromedia), a Harare-based
video news production company, on 26 September, detaining at least
10 journalists and seizing computers and video editing equipment
on the grounds that they were not properly licensed.
The journalists
were released the next day without being charged, but Afromedia's
editor, Sifelani Tsiko, and two of its other journalists have been
forced to report regularly to a police station ever since. The equipment
still has not been recovered.
The raid could
be seen as a warning to Afromedia, which has not been registered
by the Broadcasting Authority of Zimbabwe (BAZ). The BAZ tends not
to recognize or issue licences to media that do not support President
Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF party.
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