2021 Annual General Meeting
MISA Zimbabwe National Governing Council (NGC) chairperson Golden Maunganidze was re-elected for
another three-year term during the media freedom advocacy and lobby organisation’s annual general
meeting held in Harare on 30 October 2021.
Maunganidze beat former vice-chairperson, Rutendo Mawere, who was also contesting for the position
of chairperson. Ruth Butaumocho, who served as a committee member during the previous term, was
elected unopposed as vice-chairperson.
Journalists, Pamenus Tuso and Kenneth Matimaire, were elected into the NGC as committee members.
The annual general meeting ended with journalists re-affirming their commitment to co-regulation of the
media as well as democratic internet governance.
This followed the convening of a workshop on the status of the media law reform processes which
preceded the elective annual general meeting.
Earlier, in his report to the annual general meeting, Maunganidze, who is also MISA Regional Governing
Council chairperson, said self-regulation of the media was at the “core” of securing a conducive operating
environment and improving professionalism in the media sector.
He said MISA Zimbabwe thus remains firm on its position that co-regulation of the media is the way to go.
Under co-regulation, a proposed media council as espoused in the Draft Zimbabwe Media Practitioners
Bill would be the first entry point for lodging complaints against the media while the constitutional
Zimbabwe Media Commission, would be the appellant body.
“ We are therefore encouraged by the open-door engagements we continue to enjoy with the Ministry
of Information and the Parliament of Zimbabwe, in our quest for a democratic media environment, and
more so, as we continue to consult on the outstanding issue of media regulation.”
Maunganidze noted the enactment of the Freedom of Information Act, licensing of the first-ever
community radio stations and commercial television stations, as a step in the right direction.
He said this was the result of MISA Zimbabwe’s sustained and protracted Free the Airwaves campaign that
the organisation together with the Zimbabwe Association of Community Radio Stations (ZACRAS), had
“incessantly” been pushing for over the years.
On the Cybersecurity and Data Protection Bill, he said:
“It is MISA Zimbabwe’s strong conviction that any form of regulation of the Internet should be aimed at
creating safe online spaces for the exercise and enjoyment of rights as opposed to the criminalisation of
online communication under the guise of dealing with internet abuse.”
The chairperson commended the organisation’s Advocacy Committees and the entire MISA Zimbabwe
membership for being the lead ambassadors of the organisation.

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