press releases & Protests
December 19, 2008
President Robert G. Mugabe
Office of the President
Munhumutapa Building
Samora Machel Avenue
Box 7700 Causeway
Harare, Zimbabwe
Dear Mr. President:
The World Press Freedom Committee (www.wpfc.org) — an organization
representing 45 press freedom groups from throughout the world— is profoundly
distressed by the systematic repression the Zimbabwean independent media is
subject to by agents of your own government, including judicial harassment,
threats, intimidation campaigns and also abductions, such as that of independent
photojournalist Shadreck Manyere.
According to press reports, Mr. Manyere was abducted on Saturday, Dec. 13,
from a car garage in Norton, 40 km. west of Harare, where he went after
receiving a phone call from a person who wanted to meet him. That was the last
time Mr. Manyere was seen.
According to information provided to WPFC, on Sunday, Dec. 14, a group of men
identifying themselves as members of the Law and Order section of police went to
his home and requested to search it alleging that Mr. Manyere had died in a car
accident. His wife refused to let them in, but they returned shortly afterward
with a search warrant. Then they proceeded to ransack the house and took his
laptop, video camera and some tapes with them.
We must emphasize that Mr. Manyere’s is only one of a number of abductions of
political activists, human rights workers and journalists reported in recent
days and that such extra-legal abductions must cease if Zimbabwe is to be seen
as a country that respects the rule of law, both in terms of its own national
legislation and in terms of international legal standards by which Zimbabwe is
bound.
On a separate incident, your chief spokesperson, George Charamba, has
threatened to ban the accreditation of all members of the foreign media,
accusing them of “playing little gods” on the country’s affairs and of having
embarked on a propaganda assault on Zimbabwe. The Media Institute of Southern
Africa (MISA) has stated that Mr. Charamba “was on a war path after accusing the
foreign bureaus accredited in Zimbabwe of quoting President Robert Mugabe out of
context, following his Dec. 11 remarks that the country had ‘arrested’ the
cholera outbreak.”
According to MISA , the foreign media outlets that are under threat of being
banned include “Britain's Reuters, Agence France Presse, Associated Press of the
USA, France 24 International and Al Jazeera from Qatar, which are accused of
misrepresenting facts about Zimbabwe to suit the agendas of the news
organisations' host nations.”
Mr. President, your country is going through the worst crisis in its history.
Zimbabwe, the former breadbasket of southern Africa, is on the brink of famine
and suffering the worst cholera epidemic in memory. The country’s economy has
melted away, with hyperinflation rates so astronomical they are hard to
comprehend. In these critical times, a free and independent media seeking the
truth and duly informing the public constitutes a critical component of any
dreams of recovery.
The Zimbabwean independent media, however, live in perpetual fear of
fulfilling their moral, professional and constitutional duty to keep society
informed about matters of, all too often, life or death in a country where the
most basic civic rights are systematically violated.
The harassment and abduction of members of the media represent grave
violations of free speech and freedom of the press, rights that are protected in
the Zimbabwean Constitution and in international covenants, such as the African
Convention on Human and Peoples' Rights and the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, of which your country is signatory.
Therefore, Mr. President, we urge you to put the necessary measures in place
to guarantee that the members of your country’s independent media, both national
and international, can fulfill their duty to keep the public informed without
any fears for their safety or their lives.
Respectfully,
E. Markham Bench
Executive Director
World Press Freedom Committee
CC: To the members of the Coordinating Committee of Press Freedom
Organizations:
Committee to Protect Journalists
Commonwealth Press Union
Inter American Press Association
International Association of Broadcasting
International Federation of the Periodical Press
International Press Institute
North American Broadcasters Association
World Association of Newspapers
World Press Freedom Committee
To the members of the Zimbabwean government and national and international
media.
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