Info ministry in violation of law

webster_shamu_sportHARARE - The ministry of information is in violation of the law, making its increase of media registration and accreditation fees invalid and consequently of no legal force. MISA-Zimbabwe notes the Media, Information and Publicity Minister Webster Shamus response to the increase in the media registration and accreditation fees in The Herald of 7 Ja

In his response, Minister Shamu stated that his ministrys relationship with the Zimbabwe Media Commission (ZMC) is strictly administrative and the statutory media regulatory board only turns to the Minister and the Ministry for legal administrative instruments that give full effect to its decisions.

While Minister Shamus statements are legally correct, the wording in the Statutory Instrument 186 of 2010 gazetting the accreditation fees implies that the regulations emanated from his Ministry. The instrument that was published as a supplement to the Zimbabwe Gazette dated 31 December 2010, clearly states that the Ministry made the regulations in terms of Section 91 of the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act [Chapter 10:27].

Going by the wording of the statutory instrument, the ministry is in violation of the law making the instrument invalid and consequently of no legal force. This is because section 91 of AIPPA, which formerly empowered the Minister to make regulations as stated in the statutory instrument, was amended in 2007 to give the Zimbabwe Media Commission the authority to make such regulations. The Ministry only approves them.

According to Act No. 20 of 2007 section 91(b) (1), the Commission may, with the approval of the Minister, by regulation, order or notice, prescribe matters that, by this Act, are required or permitted to be prescribed or that in the opinion of the Commission are necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.

It seems there is no other clause under AIPPA implying the contrary, or at the very least, giving the Minister any leeway to act outside the ambit of this administrative role.

It is therefore MISA-Zimbabwes considered view that since the gazetting of the statutory instrument on the new accreditation and registration fees was inconsistent with the enabling legislation, they are void and therefore cannot be legally binding.

Background

Government gazetted a Statutory Instrument 186 of 2010 dated 31 December 2010 hiking accreditation and registration fees for Zimbabwean journalists and media houses by up to 400% for 2011.

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