February 28, 2002
President Robert Mugabe
Office of the President
Munhumutapa Building
Samora Machel Avenue/ 3rd Street
Harare, Zimbabwe
VIA FAX: 011-263-4-708-820
Your Excellency:
Given the fact that Zimbabwean authorities had threatened to bar foreign
correspondents from covering the March 9 and 10 presidential elections,
the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is pleased that a number of
foreign news reporters have been granted accreditation.
However, we remain concerned that the accreditation process was applied
selectively and that some foreign correspondents have been denied entry
into Zimbabwe because of their professional affiliation or critical reporting
on the country’s deepening political crisis.
CPJ’s monitoring of visa applications shows that Zimbabwean immigration
and media authorities have been using the accreditation regime as a new
tool of censorship and retaliation against foreign reporters. A week ahead
of the March 9 and 10 presidential elections, a number of journalists
and news organizations that have applied for visa and accreditation have
still not received definitive answers to their requests. Zimbabwean authorities
have provided no clear reasons for this delay.
According to a February 26 report in Zimbabwe’s state-owned The Herald
newspaper, at least 131 foreign journalists have applied for accreditation
to report on the poll; only 72 have been allowed to do so. The Herald
asserted, "Accreditation has been restricted to those organizations considered
not to have taken a biased position on land reform." The following foreign
journalists and news organizations have been unfairly denied accreditation:
Gorrel Espelund, a Swedish journalist from the newspaper Sydsvenska
Dagbladet, was not allowed to enter Zimbabwe, apparently because Pierre
Schori, the head of the group of European Union election observers, is
also from Sweden. Schori was recently expelled from Zimbabwe after being
accused of "political arrogance."
Sally Sara, a journalist with the Australian Broadcasting Service,
was also denied accreditation. The Herald quoted George Charamba, permanent
secretary of the Department of Information and Publicity, as saying that
Sara was not welcome in Zimbabwe because Australia is expected to join
a number of Commonwealth countries in condemning political violence in
Zimbabwe at the Commonwealth Head of Governments Meeting, scheduled for
March 2 and 3.
South African journalists from the Sunday Times, Mail
and Guardian, and the Independent Group of newspapers were denied
accreditation supposedly because their "ownership structures" were not
acceptable to Zimbabwean authorities. This is presumably because their
owners are either British or perceived to be affiliated with the United
Kingdom. After an appeal by Mathatha Tsedu, the chairman of the South
African National Editor's Forum, the Zimbabwean government has promised
to reconsider its decision.
U.S. journalist John Murphy of The Baltimore Sun was denied
a visa. Charamba declared that the Zimabawean government was unhappy with
a story about the country that Murphy wrote earlier in the year.
The Associated Press was also denied additional visas for foreign
correspondents. Authorities said the wire service already has a permanent
correspondent in Zimbabwe and does not need more than one person to cover
the election.
David Blair, a journalist with the United Kingdombased Daily
Telegraph, and other U.K.-based journalists and news organizations
were not allowed to travel to Zimbabwe because official policy apparently
bars most British media and government officials from the country. While
the BBC was expelled in July 2001 and has not been allowed back since,
authorities did allow Independent Television News (ITN) and the London-based
Channel 4 to send crews to Zimbabwe.
The selective application of Zimbabwe's accreditation rules and the politically
motivated censoring of critical foreign journalists and news outlets violates
the spirit of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 19 of
which guarantees all people the right to seek and impart information regardless
of frontiers.
Democratic elections depend on a press that is free to report on all issues
and viewpoints without fear of retribution or censorship. CPJ therefore
urges the government of Zimbabwe to give equal treatment to all journalists
and news organizations with pending applications for accreditation and
to ensure that news reporters covering the March 9 and 10 presidential
elections are allowed to conduct their work without intimidation.
We thank you for your attention to this urgent matters and await your
response.
Sincerely,

Ann Cooper
Executive Director
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