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Prime Minister Tsvangirai respects a free press
Movement for Democratic Change
May 19, 2011
Prime Minister
Morgan Tsvangirai respects a free press in Zimbabwe and he sincerely
believes that press freedom is an integral part of a democratic
society.
The Prime Minister, for long a victim of hate speech and a subservient
public media, has largely remained quiet in the wake of vicious
and defamatory attacks. He respects the public media, but the same
media also have a responsibility to respect him and the public office
that he holds.
It is in this
context that the Prime Minister made what the Zimbabwe
Union of Journalists is calling unpalatable remarks about journalists
from the public media. At a recent seminar
organized by the SAPES
Trust, the Prime Minister berated the public media for irresponsible
journalism, adding that judging by the incessant propaganda peddled
from those media houses, it was hard to believe that the journalists
themselves believed in their own stories.
Prime Minister
Tsvangirai has always been a victim and not a perpetrator of hate
speech. He has been a victim of a hostile public media that has
consistently and persistently attacked his person and it is regrettable
that the ZUJ has not sought to protect him or to censor the responsible
journalists and the media houses.
Everyone deserves
protection from the Zimbabwe Union of Journalists and the Zimbabwe
Media Commission; from the public media journalists who are themselves
victims of government bureaucrats and politicians, to the hapless
Zimbabweans like the Prime Minister who are needlessly vilified
every day. The Prime Minister is a staunch disciple of press freedom
and that is why he has championed media reforms as a key deliverable
if this country is to have conditions for free and fair polls.
Journalists,
particularly those in the public media, must be free to do their
duties with neither fear nor coercion. They must refuse to be purveyors
of one political party and one political leader, but must respect
the political diversity that Zimbabwe has become since the consummation
of the inclusive
government in 2009.
The Prime Minister believes in the role of free expression in economic
development. He believes that the fanning of violence and hatred
by the media must stop immediately in the national interest. But
he also upholds and respects the GPA,
which calls for the granting of new broadcasting licenses to private
players and calls on the public media to refrain from abusive language
and hate speech.
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