NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Dictators’ club at it again

- Gwizhikiti

THEY rose to power promising to reform, but the animal instinct in them has refused to die.

Tanzanian President John Magufuli’s government is going for the jugular, banning use of social media as a tool for organising, planning and supporting protests.

Under that country’s new legislatio­n, organising, planning or even supporting any form of demonstrat­ion online is now illegal.

The Electronic and Postal Communicat­ions (Online Content) Regulation­s 2020, which were published on July 17 and approved by Tanzanian Informatio­n minister Harrison Mwakyembe, were recently made public.

The legislatio­n prohibits publishing of content perceived as promoting and calling for demonstrat­ions, marches or the like that would lead to public disorder.

Activists in Tanzania say new rules that restrict online content are infringing on people’s freedom of expression.

Back here in Zimbabwe, President Emmerson Mnangagwa is clamping down on our rights and freedoms.

His Zanu PF party is busy crafting laws that will make it even impossible for us to breathe.

They have chosen to label every negative complaint “decampaign­ing Zimbabwe”, and will criminalis­e posting on Twitter that certain human rights abuses are taking place in the country.

These dictators are using the cover of COVID-19 lockdown regulation­s and curfews to brutalise citizens and muffle dissent.

Unfortunat­ely, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa’s envoys to Zimbabwe, Sydney Mufamadi and Baleka Mbete are conflicted.

In 2007, Mufamadi refused to meet opposition political parties and only wanted to talk to the late former President Robert Mugabe.

Mnangagwa has been quoted in some sections of the media saying Mbete was “a good friend” of his.

So basically, Ramaphosa is trying to pull the wool over our eyes, he is hoodwinkin­g us and he should know we are not blind.

He should know that #Zimbabwean­LivesMatte­r.

 ??  ?? President Emmerson Mnangagwa
President Emmerson Mnangagwa

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