The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20090404211952/http://www.rsf.org:80/article.php3?id_article=2574
Ameriques Asie Europe Moyen-Orient Internet Nations unies
 
Zimbabwe11 June 2002

Guardian and RFI correspondent risks two years in jail

Update: 06.12.2002

Andrew Meldrum pleaded not guilty. Then the president of the court adjourned the trial waiting for witnesses from Magunje (230 km of Harare).


06.11.2002

Andrew Meldrum will appear in court on 12 June 2002 as the first journalist to be tried under Zimbabwe’s new press law. Andrew Meldrum, who is correspondent for the British newspapers The Guardian and The Economist and for Radio France International (RFI), is charged with "abuse of journalistic privileges by publishing falsehoods" and risks two years imprisonment if convicted.

"We call on the judiciary to show their independence of the government and to do all they can to see that the charges against him are dropped," said Reporters Without Borders secretary-general Robert Ménard. "He was simply doing his job and nothing can justify his imprisonment for this."

"Usually when journalists are arrested in Zimbabwe, they are freed on bail almost immediately, after which the case drags on for years and very rarely comes to anything," he said. "In this instance, the government seems to have decided to fast-track the case and apply this very repressive law."

Andrew Meldrum quoted in The Guardian an item from the Zimbabwean paper Daily News that said militants of the ruling ZANU-PF party beheaded a woman in a village in northwestern Zimbabwe. A few days later, the Daily News said there was no proof this had happened and apologised to the ZANU-PF. Two of the paper’s reporters, Lloyd Mudiwa and Collin Chiwanza, were arrested on 30 April. The next day, Andrew Meldrum was picked up as well. All three were freed on bail on 2 May.

image 140 x 142 (JPEG) Reporters Without Borders notes that since the press law (the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act) came into force on 15 March, 11 journalists have been charged with 21 charges. President Robert Mugabe is on the Reporters Without Borders worldwide list of 38 predators of press freedom



In this country
3 March - Zimbabwe
Woman journalist freed after being held for three months
18 February - Zimbabwe
Reporters Without Borders makes three recommendations in open letter to Morgan Tsvangirai
9 January - Zimbabwe
Regional body asked to intercede on behalf of imprisoned woman journalist
26 December - Zimbabwe
Abducted journalist and rights activist now faces possible death penalty on terrorist plot charge
17 December - Zimbabwe
Concerns grows after more abductions of journalists

in the annual report
Zimbabwe - Annual Report 2008
Zimbabwe - Annual Report 2007
Zimbabwe - Annual report 2006

Africa press releases
3 April - Niger
In latest judicial harassment of broadcasting group, director-general charged with “false news”
1 April - Côte d’Ivoire
Judge frees Le Repère journalist but imposes heavy fine on him and his editor
31 March - Somalia
Freelance journalist gets two years in prison in Puntland on defamation charge

africa archives
archives

reports
18 March 2009 - Democratic Republic of Congo
“Bukavu, murder city”: investigation report into murders of journalists in the capital of Sud-Kivu
21 May 2008 - Eritrea
Naizghi Kiflu, the dictatorship’s eminence grise
6 March 2008 - Kenya
"How far to go ?" Kenya’s media caught in the turmoil of a failed election
archives

Sign the petitions
Eritrea
Sign the petition for the release of ten Eritrean journalists

'
© Reporters Without Borders - 47, rue Vivienne, 75002 Paris - France
| About us | Contact us | Links | RSS | Rsfblog | Journalists Memorial |