Johannesburg/Harare - The Zimbabwe government Wednesday
announced restrictive new licensing fees of up to 30,000 US dollars on
journalists working for foreign media in Zimbabwe, prompting
complaints that the government is trying to drive journalists out of
the country.
The new guidelines would further require Zimbabweans working for
foreign media outlets to pay a staggering 4,000 US dollars to practice
journalism in Zimbabwe for one year.
Harare would demand 30,000 dollars for foreign media houses that
want to work in Zimbabwe. According to the government- controlled
Media and Information Commission (MIC), that would break down to
10,000 US dollars for the application and 20,000 US dollars for
accreditation, payable only in foreign currency.
Journalists can also opt to pay a fee of 1,500 US dollars for
permission for each individual journalism project within Zimbabwe.
Journalists who work for state-controlled media only have to pay a
fee of 1 million Zimbabwean dollars, worth less than 1 US dollar at
current exchange rates.
Human rights lawyers and African media groups like the Media
Institute of Southern Africa (MISA) have already questioned the
legality of the edict.
The new guidelines 'smack of machinations to frustrate and make it
difficult to operate in Zimbabwe,' said MISA in a statement.
Zimbabwe has some of the harshest conditions for journalists in
world, since it introduced Access to Information and Protection of
Privacy Act (AIPPA) legislation in 2002.
Several foreign and local journalists have been arrested in
Zimbabwe for practicing without accreditation since then.
Last month President Robert Mugabe's spokesman George Charamba
threatened to ban foreign news bureaus in Zimbabwe, saying they quoted
his boss out of context.
Mugabe also said the country had 'arrested' the cholera outbreak
which has since claimed over 1,700 lives so far since August last
year.
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