New York, May 21, 2004Less than 48-hours after being arrested
and released, Editor Bornwell Chakaodza and reporter Valentine Maponga,
both with the independent weekly The Standard, were re-arrested
early this morning.
The two journalists were held at a police station until this afternoon,
when they were taken to court for arraignment. They were formally charged
with "publishing false statements prejudicial to the State" with the intention
of "inciting or promoting public disorder or public violence or endangering
public safety" under Section 15 of the draconian Public Order and Security
Act.
Chakaodza and Maponga were released on bail of 50,000 Zimbabwe dollars
(US$10) each later this afternoon.
The charges stemmed from an article Maponga wrote for the May 16 edition
of the paper alleging that the family of a mining company executive who
was recently murdered blamed senior government officials for plotting
the man's assassination.
Police told the journalists today that they interviewed the relatives
of the slain businessman on May 20, and that the victim's brother, who
is quoted in the report, denies having been interviewed by the newspaper.
Chakaodza and Maponga stand by their story.
On May 19, at least six police officers raided The Standard offices
looking for Maponga, who was out on assignment, Assistant Editor David
Masunda told CPJ. When Maponga returned in the early afternoon, he and
Chakaodza were taken to a police station, where they were later released
before being arrested again today.
For more information, see CPJ's May 20 alert:

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