THE NGO NETWORK ALLIANCE PROJECT - an online community for Zimbabwean activists  
 View archive by sector
 
 
    HOME THE PROJECT DIRECTORYJOINARCHIVESEARCH E:ACTIVISMBLOGSMSFREEDOM FONELINKS CONTACT US
 

 


Back to Index

Zimbabwe: Where to speak of trees is treason
Gondo Gushungo, The Financial Gazette (Zimbabwe)
May 24, 2006

http://www.fingaz.co.zw/story.aspx?stid=1193

IN June 1990, celebrated South African writer Nadine Gordimer spoke of the dangers of writers fearing freedom when censorship is finally slackened. This was at a PEN-organised International Writers Day in London, United Kingdom.

The part of her speech that caught my attention was when, quoting someone called Brecht, Gordimer spoke of countries where "to speak of trees is treason". I did not immediately understand or believe what she was talking about. I would be lying if I said I did. To me, it was a typical hyperbole --a speech that uses exaggeration in order to achieve a particular effect. I tried without success to imagine what kind of a country this could be where the rulers would stalk every book or newspaper page, television or radio programme. It could only be imaginary. Even the most despotic governments would not stoop that low. Or so I thought.

How could I even think about it? Yes, there were restrictions, limitations, isolated bullying and intimidation of the media by the government but 10 years after independence Zimbabwe still had a semblance of a relatively free media. There were no such laws as the widely condemned Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA) or the Broadcasting Services Act (BSA). Nor had anyone who is part of that crazy assortment of government appeasers and apologists dreamt of the unnecessary Interceptions of Communications Act.

But 16 years down the line, I now have this frightening thought that what was once unthinkable could just be a reality. Zimbabwe could soon come face to face with the ugly side of what Gordimer was talking about almost two decades ago.

With the way things are going there is a justifiable deep sense of trepidation. There is the real danger that Zimbabwe, where journalists considered politically dangerous have been a target of unjustified rhetoric, could go the way of Burma. In the south-east Asian nation, Than Shwe, chairman of the military junta known as the State Peace and Development Council, has only probably taken off his epaulettes but has not given up his military habits and he continues to play God. Media censorship has gone mad. The military ruler's decrees that impose strict censorship on the media could only be imagined, if they did not exist!

A couple of years ago, the Dag Hammarskjold Foundation reported that in Burma, information on issues such as industrial growth, rice production and the literacy rate are treated as state secrets. Special authorisation is needed to own fax machines, modems and even photocopiers while possession of an unlicensed computer is punishable by imprisonment of up to 15 years!

Only a fortnight ago, the New York-based Committee for the Protection of Journalists reported that Shwe's government owns all daily newspapers, radio stations and the country's three television channels. The media dare not hint at, let alone report on anti-government sentiments. Burma's few privately owned publications must submit content to the Press Scrutiny Board for approval before publishing. Thus censorship delays mean that none publishes on a daily basis. And citizens have been arrested for listening to the BBC or Radio Free Asia in public!

That is not all. The military government has created what they call a Cyber Warfare Division to monitor telecommunications, including domestic and international telephone and facsimile traffic. And that sounds eerily like what the Zimbabwean government is trying to achieve with the proposed Interceptions of Communications Act. Could the Zimbabwean government be mimicking the government of Burma? Perish the thought!

True, the same could be happening in Turkmenistan, North Korea, Equatorial Guinea and Libya among others, which have made sure that conditions that promote the free flow of information are non-existent. But why should we always benchmark ourselves against the worst in the world? Do the powers-that-be want to turn the media clock to the dark pre-domocracy days of subservience to the government? God forbid!

Admittedly, Zimbabwe is not in the league of the world's most censored countries, which have the deepest information void. But the danger signs are flashing with blinding effect if the latest manoeuvres to gag the media are anything to go by. It gives cause for concern that in the sea of abject poverty, deprivation and disillusionment, it is the introduction of these devices of censorship that is attracting government's priority attention. Nothing could be more telling as to how serious government's misplaced mistrust of the media is. It is so deep-seated so as to threaten freedom of expression and mankind's most basic need to know upon which the survival of democracy depends.

It is difficult to understand why the government, which sermonises the world on how Zimbabwe is a thriving constitutional democracy, is hell-bent on tightening the screws on the media. Yet a free media is crucial to the functioning of a free society. It needs not only reflect the nation's diversity but also to be a mirror reflection of the reality on the ground, warts and all!

True, government might be happy with the hype and very little, if any, substance coming from the state-controlled media about how popular it and the ruling ZANU PF are supposed to be against a background of stagnation and misery marking Zimbabwe today in stark contrast to other robust economies in the region (Thus sunshine journalism has been perfected into an art form). But it has to realise that its relentless efforts to muzzle the media are an assault on democracy of which access to information and the right to free expression are key elements. That is one of the major reasons Zimbabweans sacrificed life and limb in the liberation struggle -- the right to express their humanity in all its forms. Why should a government that claims to have a popular mandate seek to deny them their right to be heard?

I am not trying to glorify journalists, especially those in the private media who nonetheless have done a tremendous job under a very difficult situation. In any case, just like Ada Wilson, I know only too well that they are the messenger and not the message. But there is no denying that a free media is a cornerstone of any democratic dispensation. That is why journalists and other key stakeholders are taking the lead in agitating for the protection of a free press, not through special interest legislation but as a fundamental element of democracy. This they are doing in the full knowledge that it is not too late for Zimbabwe to repeal AIPPA. The widely condemned law is not written in stone. It was written by politicians and can be re-written by the same politicians. It is against this background that government should understand that the hue and cry raised by its objectionable pieces of legislation such as AIPPA is a testament to the grave concerns and terrifying insecurity that lurks at the heart of not only Zimbabwean journalism but also that of all democratic forces in the country. Indeed, it is impossible to excuse government's actions. There is no other reason for them other than the desire to suppress dissent and stop the free flow of information simply because the private media happens to publish true but embarrassing reports. Thus it is deemed unfriendly and hostile. But I am inclined to ask, as did Liam Yi-zheng of the Hong Kong Economic Journal: Why should we be friendly? We are the press!

Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.

TOP