Furthermore, the data protection provisions found in AIPPA are insufficient when tested against the
European Union’s current General Data Protection Regulations. These insufficiencies make Zimbabwe
an unattractive destination for data and information, thus effectively counteracting government efforts in
opening Zimbabwe to business.
Information assists citizens as well as business in making informed decisions and choices on matters
affecting their lives and operations. This entails proactive public interest disclosure of information to
instil transparency and accountability in public institutions.
Regrettably, requests for information by MISA Zimbabwe from various public institutions under the
annual MISA Regional Transparency Assessment surveys, points to a culture of inefficiency and
entrenched secrecy in public institutions. Results of the surveys which are released on the International
Day for Universal Access to Information, analyse the ease or difficult with which the public can access
relevant information.
In that regard, the Parliament of Zimbabwe emerged as this year’s most open and transparent
institution while the Postal and Telecommunications Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe is the most
closed and secretive institution.
AIPPA should thus be replaced with separate, standalone and focused pieces of legislation that
respectively deal with the right to privacy, access to information, administration of the Zimbabwe Media
Commission, and lastly, regulation of the media.
In doing so, the government should be guided by the African Platform on Access to Information
Declaration and African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights Model Law on Access to Information in
Africa.
❖ Media Professionalism
Findings by international observers to Zimbabwe’s 2018 elections on the bias of state-controlled media
such as Zimpapers and the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation, buttresses calls and agitations for
their transformation to secure their editorial independence as espoused in the Constitution.
Both Zimpapers and ZBC are supposed to serve and fulfil a public service mandate as provided under
Section 61 of the Constitution which provides for freedom of expression and media freedom. This has
not been the case for decades now owing to interference with their editorial independence by the
Executive.

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