New York, September 21, 2004On Monday, September 20,
a magistrate's court in Zimbabwe's capital, Harare, acquitted four directors
of the independent, banned newspaper the Daily News, who had been
charged with publishing the newspaper illegally. The court ruled that
the state had "failed to show a prima facie case against the accused,"
according to international news reports.
Similar charges against Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe (ANZ), which
owns the Daily News, were also dismissed, defense lawyer Beatrice
Mtetwa told CPJ.
The charges against ANZ Chief Executive Officer Samuel Nkomo and directors
Stuart Mattinson, Brian Mutsau, and Rachel Kupara had been pending since
last October, when they were detained for two days before being released
on bail. Armed police closed the Daily News, Zimbabwe's only independent
newspaper, in September 2003, under a draconian media law known as the
Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA). This law
requires all journalists and media outlets to be authorized by the Media
and Information Commission, whose board is appointed by the government.
The Daily News remains closed pending a Supreme Court ruling on
an ANZ challenge to the constitutionality of the AIPPA media law. In February,
the Supreme Court threw out a constitutional challenge to AIPPA by the
Independent Journalists Association of Zimbabwe, ending a brief reopening
by the Daily News. The newspaper said it was closing for fear that
its journalists would be arrested.
"CPJ welcomes the court's acquittal of Samuel Nkomo, Stuart Mattinson,
Brian Mutsau, and Rachel Kupara, although they should never have been
charged in the first place," said CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper. "We
reiterate our call for the Zimbabwe government to repeal its repressive
media law, allow the Daily News to reopen, and cease harassing
the independent media."

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