State of the media in Southern Africa - 2003
• DATE: October 16, 2003
PERSONS/INSTITUTIONS: Chris Gande, Oscar Nkala, Saul Gwakuba Ndlovu, Grey
Chitika
VIOLATIONS: Detained (charged)

F

our journalists from The Daily News have been charged by police for practicing without
accreditation, as required by the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIIPA).
MISA has confirmed that Bulawayo-based journalists Chris Gande, Oscar Nkala, Saul Gwakuba
Ndlovu and Grey Chitika are the latest to be charged under the AIPPA.
The four new charges bring to 20 the total number of Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe
(ANZ) journalists arrested under the AIPPA.
• DATE: October 22, 2003
PERSONS/INSTITUTIONS: Blessing Zulu, Newton Spicer
VIOLATIONS: Detained

O

n October 22 2003, journalist Blessing Zulu of the Zimbabwe Independent newspaper
and freelancer Newton Spicer were arrested while covering a demonstration organised by
the National Constitutional Assembly (NCA).
Lawyers representing the detained journalists have been denied access to their clients and have
also been threatened with incarceration.
Photographer Simon Sithole and trainee journalist Takunda Mawodza, both from the statecontrolled Herald newspaper, were also allegedly detained for a brief period for covering the
demonstration.
• DATE: October 22, 2003
PERSONS/INSTITUTIONS: NCA demonstrators
VIOLATIONS: Other

O

n October 22 2003, more than 300 NCA members were also arrested, including NCA
leaders who were lobbying for a new democratic people’s constitution. The NCA was
demonstrating, among other things, against the government’s failure to deal with the collapse
of the economy and the hardships caused by bad governance.
Heavily armed riot police put an end to the demonstration. The journalists were detained at the
Harare Central police station, together with the 300 demonstrators.

UPDATE
• DATE: October 24, 2003
PERSONS/INSTITUTIONS: Daily News
VIOLATIONS: Victory (positive judgement)

O

n October 24 2003, Zimbabwe’s Administrative Court ordered that The Daily News,
which was shut down by the government in September, be granted an operating licence.
The Administrative Court made the ruling following the newspaper’s appeal for review of a
decision by the Media and Information Commission (MIC) to deny it an operating licence.
The judge ruled that the government-appointed MIC had wrongly denied The Daily News a
licence.
MISA has confirmed that the judge ordered the licence to be issued as soon as possible. If a
licence has not been issued by November 31, then a licence will be deemed to have been
issued. In addition, the judge said the commission had not been properly constituted, invalidating all its actions to date.
So This Is Democracy? 2003

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Media Institute of Southern Africa

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