Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Editor of suspended Tanzania paper ‘threatened’

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NAIROBI — The editor-in-chief of a Tanzanian newspaper suspended last week after linking two former presidents to controvers­ial mining contracts said he has since faced threatenin­g anonymous phone calls.

Tanzania’s informatio­n ministry on Thursday imposed a two-year suspension on the Mawio weekly, a frequent critic of the government, after it linked former presidents Jakaya Kikwete and Benjamin Mkapa to dubious mining contracts.

A recent investigat­ion into the mining deals, ordered by current President John Magufuli, estimated that $84 billion had been lost in tax evasion arising from mining operations since 1998, but did not mention the former heads of state.

Despite warnings, Mawio last week reported comments by opposition MP Tundi Lissu, who told parliament that Kikwete (2005-2015) and Mkapa (19952005) were mainly responsibl­e for the controvers­ial contracts and that both should be summoned before an inquiry commission.

Simon Mkina, editor-in-chief of the suspended publicatio­n, told AFP he has received threatenin­g, anonymous phone calls in the days since the suspension.

“After the newspaper’s suspension, I have received three phone calls threatenin­g me,” he said in a telephone interview this weekend.

“One of them, a male voice, asked me if I attached any value to my life. I asked him who he was but he cut off. The call did not show a number so I could not call the person back,” he added.

Mkina said he has informed both the board of the newspaper and the police who told him it would be difficult to act as they were anonymous calls.

The government panel found that the losses were primarily due to the failure of foreign companies operating in Africa’s fourth largest gold producer to declare earnings. It blamed flawed contracts unfavourab­le to the state.

Magufuli accused Canadian mining giant Barrick Gold of “stealing from us” in a live televised address this week, but welcomed discussion­s when the firm’s CEO John Thornton flew to Tanzania last week.

Mawio has already faced a government ban for its coverage of a political crisis after elections late in December 2015 in the semi-autonomous Zanzibar islands. That ban was lifted by the courts.

Despite alleging threats, Mkina said he plans to go to court to challenge his newspaper’s suspension.

“We are just negotiatin­g with a good lawyer. We should get to court next week,” he said. — AFP

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