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New
independent weekly threatened with closure after first issue
Reporters
sans frontières / Reporters Without Borders
January
14, 2005
Reporters Without
Borders today condemned a threat by the Zimbabwean government's
Media and Information Commission (MIC) to suspend or close a new
independent newspaper, the Weekly Times, just a few days
after its first issue on account of its alleged violation of the
Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA) and
its overly "political" news coverage.
"The MIC and information minister Jonathan Moyo continue to crack
down on Zimbabwe's independent media with full impunity in the runup
to legislative elections in March," the press freedom organisation
said.
"The fact that the Weekly Times was founded with little apparent
trouble might have led one to assume the Zimbabwean government was
going to change its behaviour toward the independent press, but
these closure threats barely a week after the first issue show that
it is as determined as ever to repress freedoms," Reporters Without
Borders added.
Just days after its first issue appeared on 2 January, the Weekly
Times received an official communique from MIC chairman Tafataona
Mahoso accusing its management of deceiving the commission as to
its "true intentions."
He said the Weekly Times had betrayed a "sectarian" bias,
especially in its treatment of President Robert Mugabe, and threatened
to either suspend or close the newspaper altogether for failing
to respect the terms under which it was allowed to appear. The
Weekly Times obtained authorisation to publish last September.
Four days before the MIC's letter arrived, chief executive officer
Godfrey Ncube and editor Gibbs Dube were interrogated
by police for several hours about the newspaper's operations.
The first issue included an interview with Bulawayo bishop Pius
Ncube condemning Mugabe's failure to repent for the massacres of
20,000 civilians in Gukurahundi in the 1980s. It also referred to
a secret meeting organised by Moyo at the end of last year, called
the "Tsholotsho Declaration," that was reportedly aimed at preventing
Joyce Mujuru from being appointed vice-president of the ruling Zanu-PF
party.
In his weekly
column in The Herald newspaper on 8 January, Moyo warned
that he would like to examine the alleged links between the Weekly
Times and the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).
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