M12 NewsDay | Friday December 17 2021

Media Reforms Stakeholders Indaba Resolutions
30 October 2021
Cresta Lodge Msasa
Harare
Zimbabwe
We, the delegates to the MISA Zimbabwe facilitated Stakeholders Indaba on Media
Law and Policy Reforms held on 30 October
2021 in Harare, Zimbabwe;

updates on the process, policy pronouncements, requisite model laws, constitutional
provisions on the same, including regional
and international best practices;
Noting progress made through the enactment
of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA);

babweans to freedom of expression, media
freedom, access to information and the right
to privacy, among other fundamental rights
enshrined in the Bill of Rights:

Noting with great concern, the quest to entrench statutory regulation in Zimbabwe;

1.
Regulation of the media
a) Government should allow the industry to
self-regulate.
b) The industry is committed to the agreed
compromise position of co-regulation,
wherein the industry is the primary regulatory body while the constitutional Zimbabwe Media Commission serves as an
appellant body.
c) Government should take into consideration the Draft Zimbabwe Media Practitioners Bill that was developed by the
media industry after wide consultations
with journalists in all the country’s 10
provinces.
d) That any attempts towards entrenchment
of statutory regulation in Zimbabwe will
not be accepted by the industry.

Having debated and deliberated on the national importance of media law and policy
reforms in Zimbabwe;

Concerned with the ravaging effects of COVID-19 on media sustainability and development;

Informed by deliberations on the state of
media law and policy reforms as well as the

Cognisant of the fact that our Constitution
specifically recognises the right of all Zim-

We hereby made the following resolutions:

2.

Law Reforms

a) Government should move with speed in
its consultations and subsequent gazetting of the Broadcasting Services Act
Amendment Bill.
b) That laws such as the proposed Cyber
and Data Protection Bill which passed
through parliament and awaits the President’s assent, is in compliance with the African Commission on Human and Peoples
Rights’ (ACHPR) Revised Declaration of
Principles on Freedom of Expression and
Access to Information. The Declaration
recognises the internet as a fundamental
human right.
c) That the government should revisit its
Information and Media Panel of Inquiry
(IMPI) report and its recommendations
towards implementation of far-reaching
policy and law reforms.
3.

Media Sustainability

The media is one of the industries most affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, hence the
government should consider the following
interventions:
a) Merging the various fragmented pockets
of media development funds and establish a media development revolving fund
to re-inject capital into the struggling industry.
b) Consider tax breaks and moratoriums for
a given period of time to allow the industry to recover.
c) Ensure transparency on the current state
of the Media Development Fund.

Select target paragraph3