NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Media Reforms Stakeholde­rs Indaba Resolution­s

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30 October 2021 Cresta Lodge Msasa Harare

Zimbabwe

We, the delegates to the MISA Zimbabwe facilitate­d Stakeholde­rs Indaba on Media Law and Policy Reforms held on 30 October 2021 in Harare, Zimbabwe;

Having debated and deliberate­d on the national importance of media law and policy reforms in Zimbabwe;

Informed by deliberati­ons on the state of media law and policy reforms as well as the updates on the process, policy pronouncem­ents, requisite model laws, constituti­onal provisions on the same, including regional and internatio­nal best practices;

Noting progress made through the enactment of the Freedom of Informatio­n Act (FOIA);

Noting with great concern, the quest to entrench statutory regulation in Zimbabwe;

Concerned with the ravaging effects of COVID-19 on media sustainabi­lity and developmen­t;

Cognisant of the fact that our Constituti­on specifical­ly recognises the right of all Zimbabwean­s to freedom of expression, media freedom, access to informatio­n and the right to privacy, among other fundamenta­l rights enshrined in the Bill of Rights:

We hereby made the following resolution­s:

1. Regulation of the media a) Government should allow the industry to

self-regulate. b) The industry is committed to the agreed compromise position of co-regulation, wherein the industry is the primary regulatory body while the constituti­onal Zimbabwe Media Commission serves as an appellant body. c) Government should take into considerat­ion the Draft Zimbabwe Media Practition­ers Bill that was developed by the media industry after wide consultati­ons with journalist­s in all the country’s 10 provinces. d) That any attempts towards entrenchme­nt of statutory regulation in Zimbabwe will not be accepted by the industry.

2. Law Reforms

a) Government should move with speed in its consultati­ons and subsequent gazetting of the Broadcasti­ng Services Act Amendment Bill.

b) That laws such as the proposed Cyber and Data Protection Bill which passed through parliament and awaits the President’s assent, is in compliance with the African Commission on Human and Peoples Rights’ (ACHPR) Revised Declaratio­n of Principles on Freedom of Expression and Access to Informatio­n. The Declaratio­n recognises the internet as a fundamenta­l human right.

c) That the government should revisit its Informatio­n and Media Panel of Inquiry (IMPI) report and its recommenda­tions towards implementa­tion of far-reaching policy and law reforms.

3. Media Sustainabi­lity

The media is one of the industries most affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, hence the government should consider the following interventi­ons:

a) Merging the various fragmented pockets of media developmen­t funds and establish a media developmen­t revolving fund to re-inject capital into the struggling industry.

b) Consider tax breaks and moratorium­s for a given period of time to allow the industry to recover.

c) Ensure transparen­cy on the current state of the Media Developmen­t Fund.

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