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Government-appointed
commission refuses to give The Daily News a licence
Reporters
sans frontières / Reporters Without Borders
July 20,
2005
Reporters Without
Borders said today it was "extremely disappointed" that The Daily News'
two-year legal battle to resume publishing has been blocked by the government-appointed
Media and Information Commission's refusal on 18 July to grant it a license,
in defiance of a 14 March supreme court ruling quashing a ban on the newspaper.
"This relentless suppression of Zimbabwe's only privately-owned daily
newspaper shows the Media and Information Commission (MIC) totally lacks
independence," the organisation said.
The MIC claimed that the Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe (ANZ), the
company that publishes The Daily News, breached various sections
of the 2002 Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA)
concerning the accreditation of journalists and the publication of a newspaper
without a licence. The act makes it obligatory for news media and journalists
to register with the commission, and those who do not comply can be imprisoned.
ANZ executive chairman Samuel Sipepa Nkomo said he would appeal against
the decision before an administrative court. He accused the MIC of refusing
to give The Daily News a licence in order to reopen legal proceedings
that would delay the newspaper's reappearance indefinitely.
Forty-five journalists
employed by the newspaper and its sister publication, The Daily News
on Sunday, face the possibility of two-year prison sentences when
they appear in court on 12 October on charges of working without official
accreditation. Founded in 1999, The Daily News had a circulation
of 150,000. It was banned in September 2003.
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