NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

What crime did we commit as NewsDay?

- NewsDay.

FOR the third time this year, NewsDay journalist­s have been targeted by the powers-that-be under circumstan­ces that boggle the mind. First the publicatio­n’s reporters were thrown out of State House, together with other reporters from their stable — Alpha Media Holdings. Then the ruling Zanu PF party refused the independen­t newspaper permission to cover its elective congress, accusing its journalist­s of writing “fiction”.

And in the latest incident, someone at Parliament decided to delete the names of two NewsDay journalist­s from the list of reporters to be accredited to cover President Emmerson Mnagagwa’s State of the Nation Address at the new Parliament building in Mt Hampden.

This meant that the journalist­s were effectivel­y barred from covering yesterday’s national budget presentati­on, a very sad developmen­t, in our view.

What is most curious about the latest happening is that no reason was given for Parliament’s decision to strike off the names of NewsDay journalist­s, who, incidental­ly, have been judiciousl­y covering Parliament business.

Efforts to understand the reporters’transgress­ions against Parliament have proved fruitless, making the case even more disturbing that an arm of the State such as Parliament can decide to act in a way that is tantamount to ripping apart the national Constituti­on, which gives accredited journalist­s authority to report on Parliament and government business.

Some have aptly described this latest developmen­t as an “affront to the practice of journalism”.

This comes as a real shock when government, as far back as 2019 declared that, through the new dispensati­on, the second republic would make Zimbabwe heaven for the Press.

“What the new dispensati­on wants is a free and vibrant Press to underpin and propel the vision of a new and prosperous Zimbabwe. The second republic that began in November 2017, under the visionary leadership of President Emmerson Mnangagwa, committed itself to broaden and deepen democracy in the country. To that end, government committed itself to improve governance. The media is one such governance sector. Government has embarked on a wide range of legal reforms to align the existing laws to the Constituti­on and introduce laws that will make Zimbabwe a better country for its citizens,” Informatio­n minister Monica Mutsvangwa promised us back in 2019.

So what has happened since then that we now have instances whereby some sections of the Press are being deemed undesirabl­e, with no reasons proffered for that matter?

Under such circumstan­ces would we then be faulted for believing the surveys claiming that Zimbabwe has one of the world’s worst Press freedom records and deserves being at number 130 out of the 137 countries studied by Reporters Without Borders (RSF)?

Under the circumstan­ces we end up believing RSF’s assertions that: “Acts of intimidati­on, verbal attacks and threats (especially on social media) are still common practices (in Zimbabwe),” especially when we are not enlightene­d on what crime we have committed as

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