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ZIMBABWE:
British journalists acquitted, deported
Committee
to Protect Journalists (CPJ)
April
15, 2005
http://www.cpj.org/news/2005/Zim15apr05na.html
New York - Two
British journalists detained in Zimbabwe during parliamentary elections
left the country today after being acquitted of the criminal charge
of reporting without accreditation from the government-controlled
Media and Information Commission.
Toby Harnden,
chief foreign correspondent for the London-based Sunday Telegraph,
and photographer Julian Simmonds boarded a plane today and safely
reached neighboring South Africa, a newspaper spokeswoman said.
The journalists had spent two weeks in prison while standing trial.
Harnden and
Simmonds were arrested at a polling station in Norton, a town near
the capital, Harare, on March 31, during Zimbabwean parliamentary
elections. The journalists were charged with violating the draconian
Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA), which
requires all journalists in Zimbabwe to register with the media
commission or face a two-year jail sentence.
The journalists
were released on bail from prison yesterday after their acquittal
on accreditation charges. They were handed over to immigration authorities
for deportation today after being acquitted of a separate charge
under Zimbabwe's immigration law, according to media reports.
Magistrate Never
Diza said that state prosecutors failed to prove that Harnden and
Simmonds, who said they had traveled to Zimbabwe as tourists, were
working in the country illegally. "All in all, the state failed
to provide sufficient evidence to show the accused persons have
a case to answer," Diza said, according to news reports.
While Zimbabwean
state media reported that hundreds of foreign journalists were accredited
to cover the elections, many were refused accreditation and accused
of political bias, including all journalists from the BBC and from
the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). At least one journalist
from the Daily Telegraph, the Sunday Telegraph's sister paper, was
refused accreditation.
CPJ is a New
York-based, independent, nonprofit organization that works to safeguard
press freedom worldwide.
For more information, visit http://www.cpj.org/http://www.cpj.org.
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