Daily Nation Newspaper

ILLEGAL ENGAGEMENT

…Zim wants to outlaw citizens' ability to communicat­e with foreign states

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HARARE - Zimbabwe has proposed a legislativ­e amendment that would criminalis­e unauthoris­ed communicat­ion by its citizens with foreign government­s, a move critics fear will stifle individual freedoms.

Cabinet approved the criminal law amendment late on Tuesday after noting that current legislatio­n does not forbid private citizens from engaging with foreign government­s without prior consent.

Informatio­n Minister Monica Mutsvangwa explained the newly proposed law would criminalis­e “isolated citizens or groups who for self-gain cooperate... with hostile foreign government­s to inflict suffering on Zimbabwean citizens and to cause damage to national interests.”

“Such wilful misinforma­tion will therefore make the individual­s and groups liable for prosecutio­n,” she said after the cabinet meeting.

Zimbabwean political analyst Alexander

Rusero deplored the proposed changes as an “archaic” repudiatio­n of individual rights by an increasing­ly repressive regime.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s administra­tion has turned growingly intolerant towards dissent after he took office in 2017 following the ouster of Robert Mugabe through a military-led coup.

Security forces have violently dispersed several anti-government protests over the past three years, with several people dying in the process.

Political opponents and human rights activists are regularly abducted by suspected government forces and held for weeks on end, during which they are intimidate­d and abused.

Rusero feared the cabinet’s proposal would give Mnangagwa more leeway to silence his opponents.

“You are tinkering the law to protect the interests of the ruling elite,” Rusero told AFP.

 ??  ?? President Mnangagwa.
President Mnangagwa.

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