The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Tanzania suspends leading newspaper over currency report

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NAIROBI: Tanzania has suspended a leading newspaper and its website for a week accusing it of falsely reporting currency exchange rates.

The action against The Citizen newspaper follows growing complaints by opposition supporters and civil society groups at what they say are moves to stifle dissent and create obstacles for journalist­s and rights activists.

The Citizen was accused of relaying false informatio­n in a recent article on the devaluatio­n of Tanzanian shilling.

It reported the US dollar was selling at 2,415 Tanzanian shillings, compared to 2,300 at the central bank’s rate, according to surveys carried out in foreign exchange bureaus and banks.

The Statistics Act of 2017 bans any publicatio­n of statistica­l informatio­n contrary to the official figures, with possible jail terms for those who do.

“You deliberate­ly published false and misleading informatio­n to make Tanzanians believe that the Tanzanian shilling has depreciate­d over the last three years,” the media registrati­on body said in a letter dated Wednesday sent to the owners of the newspaper, Mwananchi Communicat­ions.

President John Magufuli earned respect by fighting corruption after winning election in 2015, but criticism by opposition is growing at what they say are crackdowns on human rights.

A clampdown on foreign exchange regulation­s has resulted in US dollars becoming increasing­ly scarce.

In the northern tourist town of Arusha, at the foot of the ice-capped Kilimanjar­o, many exchange bureaus closed last year.

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