STATE OF PRESS FREEDOM IN SOUTHERN AFRICA 2022

Expression and Access to Information in Africa,
States are called to take specific measures to
ensure their safety, including addressing all
gender specific concerns that entail harassment,
intimidation, sexual and gender based violence.
Harassment of journalists also increases
during election times where they are subjected
to arrests and physical violence as well as other
forms of intimidation.
However, in the case of the October 2022
elections in Lesotho, there was no violence
that is characteristic of the country’s previous
elections.(12)
As per the 2019 Declaration of Principles on
Freedom of Expression, access to Information
in Africa places an obligation on States to
guarantee the safety of journalists and other
media practitioners including prevention of
attacks, extra-judicial killings, torture and other
forms of violence or ill-treatment.(13)

PRESS FREEDOM AND
COUNTERING TERRORISM
It is the mandate of the State to ensure national
security and adopt the relevant measures to
address security challenges such as terrorism.
In Mozambique and Eswatini in particular,
this obligation has been overstretched and
encroaches into the freedom of expression
arena.
In Mozambique’s northern region of Cabo
Delgado province, several terrorist attacks have
been experienced.
The 2022 Law on the Prevention, Suppression
and Countering Terrorism and Proliferation of
Weapons of Mass Destruction is likely to have
a negative impact on press freedom in the
country.
Among acts that are punishable under the law
is reproduction of statements about terrorism
and spreading false information about the
conflict in the Cabo Delgado region.(14)
The punishment entails a 12-year jail-term.
The law also criminalises publication of what is
regarded as classified information pertaining to
terrorism.
This law is likely to stifle reporting on the
insurgency in the public interest. It also has the
potential to lead the media to self-censor and
scare whistleblowers.

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In Eswatini, the democracy movement
continues to demand constitutionalism and rule
of law. The movement is driven by journalists,
other media practitioners and human rights
defenders.
While no terrorist attacks have been recorded,
the anti-terrorism framework is broadly framed
to include dissenting voices demanding the
entrenchment of tenets of democracy such as
rule of law, judicial independence, respect for
human rights such as public participation as
enemies of the State and terrorists.
The anti-terrorism mission directly affects
journalists. In July 2022, for instance, the
government of Eswatini declared journalist
and editor Zweli Martin Dlamini, a terrorist and
classified his publication, Swaziland News, a
terrorist entity.(15)
In its anti-terrorism agenda, the government
devotes resources to go after those labelled as
terrorists and their enablers.(16)
The anti-terrorism mandate of the State
should not be unjustifiably applied in ways
that unreasonably limit the right to freedom of
expression, including freedom of the press.
Without undermining the veracity of the
damage that acts of terror can cause, any
measures should be proportionate and respect
human rights.
Exiled Eswa�ni
journalist and editor
Zweli Mar�n Dlamini
PIC CREDIT: Eswa�ni
Newsroom via
Facebook

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