New York, September 12, 2003Zimbabwean authorities
have shuttered the offices of the Harare-based Daily News, the
country's only independent daily.
A Daily News staffer who answered the phone at the newspaper's
offices this evening said that "our operations are being ceased." According
to Agence France-Presse (AFP), a Daily News reporter said today
that "about 20 police officers walked through the paper's offices ordering
everyone out of the building."
AFP also reported that the police detained three staff members, including
the circulation manager, and that editor Nqobile Nyathi was told to report
to Harare's main police station.
"We are outraged that the Daily News has been
closed," said Ann Cooper, executive director of the Committee to Protect
Journalists (CPJ). "This is an affront not only to the brave journalists
who put out this paper each day but also to the people of Zimbabwe, who
rely on the Daily News to keep abreast of what's happening in their
country."
The newspaper's closure followed a Supreme Court ruling yesterday that
declared the Daily News was operating illegally under provisions
of the repressive Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act
(AIPPA). Under AIPPA, all media companies are required to register with
the Media and Information Commission in order to operate. The registration
application forces media outlets to disclose details such as the companies'
business plans, as well as the curriculum vitae and political affiliations
of the companies' directors, Zimbabwean journalists said.
The Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe (ANZ), the company that owns the
Daily News, challenged the legislation as unconstitutional. In
yesterday's judgment, Supreme Court Chief Justice Godfrey Chidyausiku
said that because ANZ had not registered with the commission, it was "operating
outside the law," and that the court would only hear the company's constitutional
challenge once it had "submitted itself to the law" by registering.
According to the Daily News, the ANZ now intends to apply for registration
and then file suit again challenging the legislation.
AIPPA requires that media organizations be registered and that individual
journalists be accredited by the Media and Information Commission in order
to operate. The minister of communications appoints the commission's board
in consultation with the president.
Since President Robert Mugabe signed AIPPA into law on March 15, 2002,
Zimbabwean authorities have used the act to prosecute reporters and to
deny accreditation to select journalists.

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