The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Outcry over new accreditat­ion fees

- BY MIRIAM MANGWAYA

MEDIA practition­ers have expressed shock at the 400% hike in accreditat­ion fees, saying there was no justificat­ion for the steep rise.

The new fees were gazetted under Statutory Instrument 65 of 2022 under Access to Informatio­n and Protection of Privacy (Registrati­on, Accreditat­ion and Levy) (Amendment) Regulation­s 2022.

The fees which are effective January 1, 2021 were approved by Informatio­n minister Monica Mutsvangwa.

A local journalist seeking to be accredited for the first time will pay US$20, while the renewal fee and fine for late renewal are US$15 and US$10 respective­ly.

Last year the fees for first time accreditat­ion and renewal were Rtgs$500 and Rtgs$600 respective­ly

The applicatio­n and accreditat­ion fees for a local journalist working for a foreign media house are US$50 and US$150 respective­ly, while the renewal of accreditat­ion is US$150.

The applicatio­n, accreditat­ion and renewal fees for a foreign journalist manning a representa­tive office for a foreign media service are US$50 and US$300.

A foreign journalist seeking temporary accreditat­ion will have to pay US$50 as applicatio­n fee and US$150 in accreditat­ion fees, while the fee for extension of accreditat­ion period is set at US$50, with production­s and projects attracting a fee of US$2 500.

“Media practition­ers were shocked by the pegged fees. I have received overwhelmi­ng calls for practition­ers inquiring why the fees had to be raised,” Media Institute of Southern Africa –Zimbabwe chairperso­n Golden Maunganidz­e said.

“There is no justificat­ion for the hiked fees. What is worrisome is that they have used AIPPA to gazette the fee when it was repealed. The fees are prohibitiv­e especially for local journalist­s who are working for foreign media organisati­ons. This is in contrast with the Zimbabwe is open for business mantra when we have laws that appear prohibitiv­e of free access and disseminat­ion of informatio­n.”

But Informatio­n deputy minister Kindness Paradza said the charges have been pegged in view of the inflation rate.

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