Dear Prime Minister:
We have learned with alarm and concern that the Editor of the Bulawayo
Chronicle, Brezhnev Malaba, a reporter on his staff, Nduduzo Tshuma, and
Zimpapers Bulawayo branch General Manager Sithembile Ncube, have been
charged with criminal defamation and breaches of the Criminal Law
(Codification and Reform) Act over a news article published last month that
exposed allegations of corruption at the GrainMarketing Board (GMB).
The criminal defamation charge, according to reports in the Chronicle,
relates to a reference in the story to an unidentified ":senior police
officer” being "the protector” of the GMB manager. The offences under the
Criminal Law Act are under a section which deals with the publication of
"falsehoods” and Section 30 that deals with "bringing disaffection” to the
police.
Criminal defamation and criminal offences relating to the publication of
"falsehoods” or which result in "disaffection” of the police are
discredited in established democracies and have no place in a country such
as Zimbabwe which strives to be counted as a democracy.
In any case, the report published by the Chronicle does not by any stretch
fall under such highly questionable laws. Nor have the police initiated an
investigation into the serious allegations of corruption contained in the
story which quotes millers accusing GMB official of diverting maize supplies
to the black market while cheating hungry villagers by offering a few bags
of grain in exchange for livestock.
It seems that in charging the newspaper’s staff the police are taking
"legal” action against the newspaper to punish it for what has been
published and to prevent more details of corruption allegations from being
exposed.
Shortly after taking office, you committed your government to review unjust
media laws which have stifled freedom of expression and the operation of a
free media in Zimbabwe. We have also noted with approval the special
emphasis your government’s new (March 2009) Short Term Emergency Recovery
Programme (STERP) has given to the essential need for media freedom and
freedom of expression to be pursued in the country’s recovery -listed in the
introduction to the programme as a key priority, second only to the
Constitution and constitution-making processes.
Our view is that the extra-judicial conduct of the Bulawayo police against
the Chronicle’s editor and staff clearly violates STERP in relation to the
media. The conduct of the police is highly damaging to the new government in
Zimbabwe — and to your efforts to find solutions to your country’s ills.
We believe that unless the spurious charges against the editor and his staff
are withdrawn immediately, people will question the new Zimbabwe
government’s dedication to its professed intentions as outlined in STERP.
The bona fides of the new government are at stake.
We make this earnest appeal that your government institute an immediate
inquiry into the conduct of the Bulawayo police against the Chronicle and a
further probe into the allegations raised by the Chronicle story into the
operations of the GMB, while immediately withdrawing the unfounded charges
against the paper.
We are copying this letter to President Robert Mugabe because we believe
that he, too, will recognise the dangers the actions of the Bulawayo police
pose for the new government, particularly in view of his recent appeal to
"friends of Zimbabwe” to come to its aid. Actions like the police conduct
against the Chronicle could well serve as justifications for continuation of
sanctions against Zimbabwe by the European Union and the United States.
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
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
Post published in: Politics