NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Journo sues minister

- BY SILAS NKALA  Follow Silas on Twitter @silasnkala

BULAWAYO-BASED journalist Zenzele Ndebele has taken Informatio­n minister Monica Mutsvangwa and the Zimbabwe Media Commission (ZMC) to court for failing to abide by the Constituti­on and release to the public informatio­n on public enterprise­s.

Zenzele, who is director of Centre for Innovation and Technology (CITE), an online news outlet, wants Mutsvangwa and the ZMC to comply with section 40(1) of the Freedom of Informatio­n Act Chapter 10:33.

Ndebele filed the applicatio­n at the Bulawayo High Court citing ZMC chairman, ZMC and Mutsvangwa as respondent­s.

In his applicatio­n, Ndebele submitted that access to informatio­n was part of the rights provided for under the Bill of Rights which came into effect in May 2013 when the new Constituti­on was adopted.

He said disclosure of informatio­n was important for public accountabi­lity.

“As one of the objects, the Act seeks to give effect to the right to access informatio­n in section 62 of the Constituti­on,” Ndebele said.

“It then sets about creating the legal framework and mechanisms for accessing informatio­n that is held by public entities, public commercial bodies, and statutory bodies.”

Ndebele said the Act prescribed that any person who applies to such bodies to access informatio­n may do so in writing “in a prescribed manner” to an informatio­n officer in a public entity, public commercial entity or holder of the statutory office concerned.

He said the applicatio­n for access to informatio­n and prosecutin­g an appeal in case of refusal are things that are permitted by the Act and are actually prescribed and are supposed to be in a prescribed form.

“In the absence of making such regulation­s providing for such processes, section 62 on the right to access to informatio­n will be rendered mitigatory. I am advised that to render mitigatory the enjoyment of such a constituti­onal right could not have been the intention of the law maker,” Ndebele said.

“Consequent­ly, the commission has failed to act in line with the law by failing to enact such regulation­s considerin­g that the Act was gazette in July 2020 (8 months ago). The commission was supposed to carry out this duty within a reasonable time. Failure to do so within the past eight months means the commission has failed to carry out this duty within reasonable time.”

Ndebele said even the fact that there has been lockdowns owing to the coronaviru­s cannot be a reasonable excuse as the State has not stopped functionin­g, with Parliament working, at times virtually.

“I am advised that a mandamus is thus required to get the commission to make the regulation­s so as to facilitate the right to the enjoyment of the constituti­onal right of access to informatio­n. As a journalist my work involves the need that I access informatio­n that is held by public or statutory bodies so that I can produce fully informed news items,” he said.

“This is in line with the constituti­onal right espoused in section 61 of the Constituti­on on freedom of expression and freedom of media which bestows the freedom to seek, receive and communicat­e ideas and other informatio­n.”

Ndebele prayed for an order for a madamus (extraordin­ary writ issued by a court) directing the commission to make the regulation­s envisaged in section 40(1) of the Freedom of Informatio­n Act [Chapter 10:33] within 45 days of the order. The respondent­s are yet to file opposing papers to the applicatio­n.

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