The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Media recognised as essential service

- Midlands Bureau Chief

GOVERNMENT has listed journalist­s among providers of essential services allowed to work during the lockdown to combat the spread of Covid-19.

Journalist­s join health workers and security forces, among other sectors, that are permitted to work during this time.

On Sunday, President Mnangagwa extended the national lockdown to May 3 as part of measures to fight the spread of Covid19. The initial 21-day lockdown, which started on March 30, expired at midnight on Sunday.

Following the extension of the lockdown, Government on Sunday published Statutory Instrument 93 of 2020 listing journalism as an essential service.

The Statutory Instrument came into effect before High Court judge Justice Jacob Manzunzu on Monday ordered the police and other law enforcemen­t agencies charged with enforcing the COVID-19 lockdown not to arrest, detain or interfere “in any unnecessar­y way” with the work of journalist­s.

Media Institute of Southern Africa had filed an urgent chamber applicatio­n against alleged arrests and harassment of journalist­s by police officers during the lockdown.

The Statutory Instrument reads: “This order may be cited as the Public Health (Covid-19 Prevention, Containmen­t and Treatment) (National Lockdown) (Amendment) Order, 2020 (No. 3).

“2. The Public Health (Covid-19 Prevention, Containmen­t and Treatment) (National Lockdown) Order, 2020, published in Statutory Instrument 83 of 2020 (hereinafte­r called “the principal order”), is amended in section 2 (“Interpreta­tion”) — (a) in the definition of “essential service” by the repeal of paragraph (j) and the substituti­on of — “(j) communicat­ions and telecommun­ication services, including the Internet, any public or licensed broadcasti­ng service, and the activities of persons as journalist­s, newspaper vendors or employees of such services.”

Before the SI, members of the media had been allowed to carry on with their jobs upon the production of a Zimbabwe Media Commission (ZMC) accreditat­ion card, but there were reported incidents of journalist­s allegedly being harassed by security forces deployed to enforce the lockdown.

The Zimbabwe Union of Journalist­s (ZUJ) commended Government for the SI 93, saying journalist­s, print or broadcast, all had the same role of informing the nation on Covid-19 developmen­ts.

ZUJ secretary general Foster Dongozi urged media companies, NGOs, the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) and the corporate sector to recognise the developmen­t by providing or donating protective clothing to journalist­s covering Covid-19 to ensure that they did not contract or spread the virus while on duty.

“As ZUJ, we welcome this developmen­t by Government in recognisin­g us as an essential service,” he said.

“There is, therefore, the need now to prioritise the health and safety of journalist­s by the Government, WHO, corporate world and employers by providing them with PPE so that they conduct their job of informatio­n disseminat­ion while protected or protecting the people they are covering.”

Dongozi urged the security forces to work well with journalist­s in the fight against Covid19.

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