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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Asylum and Immigration Tribunal >> LM (MDC) Zimbabwe [2002] UKIAT 03916 (21 August 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIAT/2002/03916.html Cite as: [2002] UKIAT 3916, [2002] UKIAT 03916 |
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LM (MDC) Zimbabwe [2002] UKIAT 03916
HX36821-2001
Date of hearing: 7 August 2002
Date Determination notified: 21 August 2002
LM | APPELLANT |
and | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | RESPONDENT |
"POLITICAL ACTIVISTS
5.87 Opposition political activists, particularly those belonging to the MDC, have been targeted and attacked by Government supporters and war veterans since the parliamentary elections in June 2000. Although the Constitution allows for multiple political parties, Government supporters and security force members have subjected opposition activists to significant intimidation and violence. There were reports in 2001 of a growing number of abductions of MDC activists committed by Government supporters, especially in rural areas where loyalty top ZANU-PF is strongest. Some abductees were tortured and others later were found killed. Members of the security forces also participated in attacks on opposition activists and suspected supporters. [2b][1]
JOURNALISTS
5.88 Although the Constitution provides for freedom of expression, the Government restricts this right in practice. Security forces have arbitrarily detained journalists and refused to investigate or punish security force members who, with ZANU-PF supporters, tortured and harassed journalists. (See Sections 5.5 - 5.28 on freedom of speech and the media for further information on the position of journalists) [2b]"
"FREEDOM OF SPEECH & THE MEDIA
General
5.5 Although the Constitution provides for freedom of expression, legislation limits this freedom on grounds such as defence and public order. The Government continues to restrict press freedom and monopolises radio broadcasting. Journalists have faced increasing difficulties as the Government has sought to extend its control over the news in the face of political crises. The Government enforces restrictive laws against journalists and intimidates them. Security forces have arbitrarily detained journalists and have refused to punish security force members who have tortured journalists…
5.6 The Government restricts the freedom of speech of its political opponents and those making public comments critical of President Mugabe. Sections 44 and 50 of the Law and Order Maintenance Act (LOMA) criminalise and allow the Government to suppress the publication of any statement deemed to be subversive or likely to cause "alarm and despondency". In addition, anti-defamation laws criminalise libel of both public and private persons. Legislation passed in early 2002, ahead of the presidential election in March 2002, placed stringent Government controls on journalists and the media.
Newspapers
…5.20 The International Press Institute wrote to President Mugabe in November 2001 asking him to repudiate his Government's accusation that local and foreign journalists were colluding with terrorists. The pro-ZANU-PF Herald newspaper had quoted a Government spokesman as saying that six foreign journalists were "assisting terrorists" after they had reported on attacks on whites and opposition activists in Bulawayo. The journalists report for British newspapers the Independent, the Guardian, the Times and the Daily Telegraph, US news agency Associated Press and the South African Business Day. One of the journalists also reports for the Zimbabwean paper Financial Gazette. Since the terrorist attacks in the USA on 11 September 2001, President Mugabe has repeatedly referred to his opponents as 'terrorists'…
5.21 The controversial Access to Information and Privacy Act, passed by Parliament on 31 January 2002, barred foreign journalists from working in Zimbabwe except for short periods to cover specific events and compelled local journalists to apply for a one-year renewable licence issued by the government-appointed Statutory Media Commission or face two years in prison. Other provisions of the bill include a ban on publishing "unauthorised" reports of Cabinet deliberations or releasing information about intergovernmental relations or their financial and economic interests. Journalists' unions pledged to fight the new law and defy its strict rules…
Radio and Television
5.24 Radio is the most important medium of public communication, especially for people in rural areas. The government controls all domestic radio stations through the State-owned Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC), supervised by the Minister for Information and Publicity in the President's Office. Ministers are reported to routinely review ZBC news and delete reports on the activities of political opponents.
5.25 In September 2000 the Supreme Court declared the government's broadcasting monopoly to be unconstitutional. Despite a statement by the Information Minister that no private radio stations would be allowed to broadcast until the Government had set up a proper regulatory framework for private operators, a private radio station called Capital Radio began operating. In October 2000 police shut down Capital Radio and seized its equipment, despite the issue by the High Court earlier the same day of a decision barring the seizure. The police also searched the homes of the station's co-owners and others associated with the station, including MDC MPs Michael Auret and David Coltart. The High Court ordered the return of the seized equipment and directed the Government to issue a licence within ten days. Most of the equipment was returned but a licence was not issued and, that same day, President Mugabe issued by decree temporary regulations giving the Information Minister the power to issue and deny broadcasting licences. Later in October 2000, a legal committee of Parliament, in a non-binding resolution, declared the new regulations unconstitutional. At the end of 2001, Capital Radio was awaiting Parliament's final report on the regulations before proceeding with a planned appeal to the Supreme Court.
5.26 In 1999 the Supreme Court ruled that the Government's monopoly on telecommunications was unconstitutional because it interfered with the right to freedom of expression. The Government subsequently granted a broadcasting licence to a private television station, Joy TV. However, the President's nephew, Leo Mugabe, is reported to have financial ties with Joy TV and the ZBC reportedly exercises editorial control over the station's programming. International television broadcasts are freely available through private cable and satellite firms.
5.27 In April 2001 Parliament passed a sweeping new law establishing the Broadcasting Authority of Zimbabwe and giving the government control of broadcasting. The new law gives Jonathan Moyo's Information Ministry the final authority to issue broadcast licences and the right to withdraw licences from independent broadcasters. It also stipulates that independent broadcasters should give the government one-hour a week to air its policies. The law prohibits foreigners and non-residents from owning shares in broadcasting companies and limits individuals to a maximum of 10% in station ownership. The MDC criticised the new law as a crackdown on free speech ahead of presidential elections due to be held in 2002."
J A J C Gleeson
Vice-President
Note 1 The bracketed reference [2b] refers
to the United States Department of State, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights,
and Labor 2001 Country Report on Zimbabwe, issued in March
2002 [Back]