AFRICAN MEDIA BAROMETER
ZIMBABWE 2010
Executive Summary
Uganda’s In February 2009 the then ruling party Zimbabwe African National
Union – Patriotic Front (ZANU PF) and two formations of the then opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) formed the “inclusive government”.
This new government was based on a “Global Political Agreement” (GPA) of
September 2008 which formally recognises the “importance of freedom of
expression and the role of the media in a multi-party democracy”.
The economy has stabilised with the introduction of the US dollar as the operating
currency and economic production has picked up. The extent and frequency of
persecution of media practitioners has decreased as has the number of incidents of
hate speech in the media.
Hopes, however, that the “inclusive government” would repeal or amend repressive
acts did not materialise in full by April 2010. The most prominent among these
are the Public Order and Security Act (POSA), the Access to Information and
Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA), the Broadcasting Services Act (BSA) and the
Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Act.
The latter makes it a criminal offence to publish or communicate “false statements
prejudicial to the state”. A person may be fined or imprisoned for up to five years
for publishing a “false” statement likely to incite public disorder, affect the defence
and economic interests of the country, or undermine public confidence in the
police, armed forces or prison officers.
AIPPA still requires print media to obtain a license to operate from the newly
formed Zimbabwe Media Commission (ZMC) created through a constitutional
amendment. Media organisations are opposed to the ZMC as it will administer
the repressive AIPPA and because its very existence contradicts the notion of selfregulation of the media. For the time being, however, media houses and associations
as well as civil society organisations have accepted the Commission grudgingly as
the only available legal vehicle to get new print media on the streets. A month
after the panel meeting, at the end of May 2010, the Commission approved the
applications of three new daily newspapers and re-registered a previously banned
daily and a weekly.
Fear still permeates society in general. There are many who express themselves
rather freely but everyone does so with a degree of fear. In most communities,
especially in the rural areas, the threat of exposure does not come directly from

AFRICAN MEDIA BAROMETER ZIMBABWE 2010

7

Select target paragraph3