Connect with us

Opinion

Safety of journalists and access to information pre-requisite in ensuring credible elections in Zambia

Published

on

BY GOLDEN MAUNGANIDZE

The Media Institute of Southern Africa (Misa) is greatly encouraged by the explicit provisions in Zambia’s constitution which guarantee freedom of expression and the right to privacy.

Advertisement

We believe that these constitutional provisions offer immense opportunities for the entrenchment of democracy and the enjoyment of fundamental rights in the country.

Hence, ahead of, during and after the elections, on the 12th of August 2021, Misa is particularly concerned about the safety and security of journalists and the media in Zambia; the enactment of claw-back laws such as the recently enacted Cyber Security and Cyber Crimes Act No.2 of 2021 and the need for citizens to access to information at all times both online and offline.

The throttling and subsequent internet disruptions in Zambia on the day of elections to date are deplorable, given that elections are at the core of the exercise of democracy and respect of citizens’ rights.

Advertisement

Access to the internet and social media platforms is very critical during an election as it facilitates transparency around the processes and fosters active citizen participation.

Suffice to note that internet access equates to access to information and to the realisation of the right to freedom of expression.

All this is of concern to us because the necessary media legislative reforms required to align the existing constitution have not yet been effected.

Advertisement

Misa has previously stated the urgency of these reforms, noting that they are of significant importance ahead of the poll.

The failure to critically address and reform existing laws such as the Public Order Act (1955); Independent Broadcasting Authority (IBA) Act, the Penal Code Act (1938) and the recently promulgated Cyber Security and Cyber Crimes Act among others is an unfortunate drawback that might have serious repercussions on how the forthcoming elections are conducted.

Misa holds that Zambia has missed an opportunity to ensure these laws conform with its constitution and also, other regional and international instruments that the country is a signatory to.

Advertisement

These instruments include the Universal Declaration on Human Rights, African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights, Banjul Declaration on the Principles of Freedom of Expression in Africa, Southern Africa Protocol on Sport, Culture and Information and the African Charter on Broadcasting.

Further, Misa is concerned with the failure of the government of Zambia to move with speed towards the enactment of the Access to Information (ATI) Bill.

The ATI law is critical especially on critical issues of national importance such as elections as it provides for transparency and accountability, contrary to the prevailing environment of secrecy, which breeds corruption and other vices.

Advertisement

We are concerned that in the absence of the said reforms, the Sadc Guidelines and Principles on the Conduct of Democratic Elections will not be fully adhered to ahead of, during and immediately after the August 12 poll.

As a result, Zambians will not fully enjoy increased media freedom, their right to freedom of expression, assembly, association, and access to information.

Misa is also alarmed by the cases of media freedom violations in Zambia since the beginning of the year. In the first half of the year alone, Misa Zambia recorded cases of politically motivated attacks of media houses by supporters and officials of the ruling party, the Patriotic Front (PF).

Advertisement

The attacks included the ransacking and damage of property at the Liberty Radio in an attempt to block the opposition Democratic Party president, Harry Kalaba, from appearing on a paid-for programme.

This was followed by yet another attack, by the PF officials, who violently disrupted a radio programme on Radio Luswepo featuring, yet again, the DP president, Kalaba.

Both attacks happened in the month of February 2021. In March 2021, the PF officials and supporters teargassed Radio Chet, for featuring United Party for National Development (UNDP) provincial chairperson, Mathews Chilekwa.

Advertisement

On June 24, Radio Kalungwishi in Chiengi District was set ablaze, but not a single person was held accountable for such attacks on the media.

We reiterate that both officials and supporters of political parties should be educated that actions that undermine media freedom constitute a serious violation of journalists’ constitutional right to media freedom and citizens’ right to freedom of expression and access to information.

We further urge political leaders to guard against making inflammatory statements that incite and excite their supporters to take the law into their own hands thus tarnishing the images of their respective parties, and ultimately, that of Zambia.

Advertisement

To this end, the statement by President Edgar Lungu that journalists should be protected and be safe at all times when executing their duties is highly commendable and hope that tangible safety nets will be put in place by his administration.

The president made these remarks during this year’s World Press Freedom Day commemorations.

Misa also calls upon media houses to acquaint journalists covering elections with the profession’s safety and security measures to reduce the significance of threats or attacks against journalists and media workers.

Advertisement

In the same breath, we encourage all journalists to strictly adhere to their codes of ethics and to observe the highest standards in reporting the elections by showing a commitment to professionalism, media credibility and integrity.

Misa thus calls for the following minimum conditions during and post the August 12 elections in Zambia:

· The African Union and Southern African Development Community (Sadc), should insist that the government of Zambia guarantees that journalists and media houses covering the election story are allowed to conduct their lawful professional duties without hindrance as it is their constitutionally guaranteed right to media freedom.

Advertisement

· The government should order the police to firmly deal with these wanton acts of lawlessness which pose a great risk to the lives of journalists, media workers as well as their families.

· Leaders of political parties should educate their supporters that their actions constitute serious violations of journalists’ constitutional right to media freedom and citizens’ right to freedom of expression and access to information.

· Political leaders should guard against making inflammatory statements that incite and excite their supporters to take the law into their own hands (against journalists and media workers), thus tarnishing the images of their respective parties and that of Zambia

Advertisement

· Sadc should insist that the Electoral Commission of Zambia enforces the Sadc Principles on the Conduct of Democratic Elections where it pertains to political parties and citizens’ equal and equitable access to the state media, notably the Zambia National Broadcasting Corporation.

· The government of Zambia should extensively review and/or repeal the laws that hinder the enjoyment of freedom of expression, assembly and choice that is guaranteed by the country’s constitution.

· The Zambian government should see to it that the internet is available, affordable and accessible at all times before, during and after elections in line with the provisions of the revised ACHPR Declaration of Principles of Freedom of Expression and Access to Information

Advertisement

Misa wishes the peoples of Zambia well as they decide their future and that the right to expression is defended at all times even post the release of the results of the plebiscite.

Golden Maunganidze is the Misa Regional Governing Council chairperson

The Misa Regional Observer Mission was led by the RGC chairperson Golden Maugnanidze accompanied by fellow RGC members namely: Salome Kitomari, the RGC treasurer and chairperson of Misa Tanzania; Goncalves Fernando, chairperson MisaMozambique and Mandy Pondani, NGC member for Misa Malawi. Regional secretariat members, Tabani Moyo, acting regional director & Misa Zimbabwe director and Nqaba Matshazi our fundraising and regional campaigns coordinator provided technical support to the team.

Advertisement

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Opinion

Makona ranger base in Hwange National Park: a keystone for protecting critical wildlife habitat 

Published

on

BY AZZEDINE DOWNES

What began with a handshake at the Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority (ZimParks) headquarters roughly three years ago between two unlikely partners has now transformed into a long-term partnership that has played a key role in the protection and conservation of Zimbabwe’s iconic natural resources.

Marking a significant milestone in the partnership between IFAW and ZimParks, the Makona ranger base in Zimbabwe’s largest protected area—Hwange National Park—is now fully operational.

Hwange National Park is home to 150 species of mammals and designated as an important bird area with 400 distinct species and a population of elephants that is estimated to be around 45,000 individuals.

It is also a core part of the Kavango Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area (KAZA TFCA).

The establishment of the ranger base brings the partnership one major step closer to achieving its core mission: to protect the rich biodiversity of the area, conserve and enhance ecological processes, and secure key critical habitats while providing solutions that enhance ranger welfare holistically across an area spanning 14,651km2 acres.

The concept of enhancing ranger welfare is fundamental to ensuring the long-term success of the initiative.

Rangers must be fully dedicated to the objective at hand, as its breadth and scope are not for the faint of heart.

Leaving their families for months at a time, the work of a ranger demands a level of personal sacrifice that is often too easily overlooked.

Hence, the inauguration of the Makona ranger base serves needs that go beyond the functional and provides a foundational home and conducive working environment for a team who have chosen to undertake a way of life dedicated to the preservation of wildlife and the natural environment.

The base now includes ranger houses, an office complex, recreational centre, and an enhanced radio communications system.

The impact of all these investments has been significant, resulting in zero incidents of elephant poaching in IFAW-supported areas including Makona over the last three years.

Complementing this enormous success, the IFAW-ZimParks partnership is also investing in the development of sustainable tourism, providing key upgrades to campsites and lodges, and improving park visibility and viability through the construction of a new multi-purpose entrance gate and ancillary facilities.

 

As is the case with most effective partnerships, the one between IFAW and ZimParks is built upon trust, transparency, and friendship.

 

As the president and CEO of IFAW and as the director general of ZimParks, we are thrilled to celebrate this achievement together.

 

It is a testament to a mutual, long-term commitment to the protection and preservation of biodiversity, grounded in a partnership to deliver transformational change for people, wildlife, and the natural environment.

 

From our experience, the most successful conservation efforts are those which consider human connection—this is essential for enhancing the stewardship of natural resources across landscapes, regardless of size or culture.

 

These are some of the reasons why we recently upgraded the Dete Old Age Home, a well-known institution located on the periphery of Hwange National Park with the capacity to care for 40 senior citizens.

 

The community facility was made age-friendly through upgrades that included wheelchair access, representing just a few of the tangible results of conservation efforts which get transferred to the benefit of marginal local communities and institutions.

Other projects in the area include the installation of boreholes that provide easy access to potable water, directly improving community gardens that enhance nutritional health, and improved food security for local communities.

Another critical result worth highlighting has been the Environmental Stewardship Programme, an effort targeting schools in the outlying area of the park to build future environmental champions.

To enhance ‘conservation on the go’, the partnership has introduced a Pioneer Wildlife Ambulance in Zimbabwe, enhancing in situ care of both injured and sick animals while also undertaking efforts around disease surveillance.

Not only do the rangers now have the vehicles they need to reach animals in need of assistance, but also the enhanced patrolling capabilities that allow them to cover a far greater swath of the landscape than ever before.

Alongside the actual vehicles themselves, the roads have been upgraded to improve mobility, allowing the vehicles to traverse more effectively and with lesser damage.

Water supply for animals was also enhanced, providing a critical lifeline for wildlife as well as the surrounding human communities—minimizing the competition resulting from a limited water supply which is so often the source of human-wildlife conflict.

All of these results are essentially building blocks that serve as ideas that can be scaled up to fit the needs of other national parks across the landscape including Zambezi, Victoria Falls, and Kazuma Pan, all strategically located and critical for wildlife dispersal within the Kavango-Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area (KAZA TFCA).

The milestones (and more to come) achieved under this partnership are fundamental to the success of the Room to Roam initiative which seeks to secure connected spaces and safe passage for elephants and other wildlife, ultimately fostering harmonious coexistence with people.

Each milestone has served as an additional keystone for the foundation of our long-term partnership agreement of 25 years—and counting.

Though the first steps of practically any endeavour are usually the hardest, those taken by our respective organizations throughout this mutual partnership have been immensely fulfilling—for wildlife, for the local communities, and for the promise to a more prosperous future where the greatest beneficiary will no doubt be nature itself.

Written by Azzedine Downes, IFAW president and CEO and Dr. Fulton U. Mangwanya, director-general of Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority (ZimParks)

Continue Reading

Opinion

Best things to do and places to stay in Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe

Published

on

BY URBANMATTER STAFF

Every traveller hopes to visit and experience Victoria Falls’ most enjoyable location at least once. However, traveling anywhere costs a lot of money, and seeing Victoria Falls in Zimbabwe is no exception. Naturally, you would also need to set aside some money for this. But how will you confirm that you have created the appropriate budget? Well, this inquiry is both pertinent and essential. Knowing every detail about the area is necessary to find the answer to this critical issue.

However, the second concern is where to find accurate and comprehensive information about Victoria Falls. Let’s congratulate you and say that this post is here to clear up any questions, worries, or misunderstandings you may have concerning this location. With the help of this article, citizens of the United Kingdom (UK) can find cheap flights to Zimbabwe. So let’s first look at Victoria Falls to see what it offers tourists, the ideal time to go, etc.

Overview of Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe

It is one of the giant water blankets on Earth, more than two kilometres wide at this point, and it thunderously descends through several basalt canyons before dropping 108 metres into a small pit. It is Africa’s fourth-longest river. On November 17, 1855, Scottish missionary and physician David Livingstone made the discovery. He named it Victoria in honour of the UK’s Queen Victoria. Both the Mosi-ao Tunya National Park in Zambia and the Victoria Falls National Park, situated on the Zimbabwean side of the Zambezi River, are included as UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

Victoria Falls National Park: On the Zimbabwean side, Victoria Falls National Park is a lush rainforest reserve with some of the best views of the falls. You can stroll along the park’s walkways, which wind through the rainforest and emerge with views from where you can see four of the five separate fall sections on this side. Crossing the border between Zimbabwe and Zambia is made simple by the Victoria Falls Bridge.   

Batoka Gorge Swing: Everyone like swinging, right? This raises the bar considerably. You step off the platform while standing 120 meters above the swiftly flowing Zambezi River below. (Or you can run, jump, or dive; your “bravery/stupidity” determines the alternatives!)

Cruise on the river: You may anticipate seeing elephants, hippos, crocodiles, vervet monkeys, baboons, and birds throughout your two-hour trip. A late-afternoon boat trip is a fantastic way to take in the peace of the upper Zambezi and witness an unforgettable African sunset.

Bungee Jump: Why not attempt the 111-meter Bungee Jump from the Victoria Falls bridge’s centre? Consistently ranked as one of the top 5 bungees in the world, you have just 4 seconds to admire one of the seven wonders of the natural world before hurtling down to the river below! It is among the most exhilarating activities in Victoria Falls!

A helicopter journey is a beautiful method to comprehend Victoria Falls’ enormous immensity. The Mosi-oa-Tunya, or “The Smoke That Thunders,” mist wall that gives the location its local name will be passed over as you soar over the cascades on flights 12 and 13. As you soar above the Zambezi River, you’ll take in the beautiful sights of Batoka Gorge and keep an eye out for hippos or elephants. As a result, Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, has more to offer than its counterparts here. Let’s shift to the essay’s next section, which discusses picking the ideal moment to travel there. You can find inexpensive flights from the UK to Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, by using the following advice:

Weekday Flying: A low-cost airline must choose your flight dates, such as Tuesday or Wednesday. These weekdays were selected since they are frequently more affordable than other days. Getting the cheapet flight from the UK to wherever you worked during the week was more straightforward.

Stopover flight: It is recommended to go with airlines that provide indirect flights rather than direct flights. You might save a lot of money if you plan your trip. The cost of flying direct is prohibitive in comparison. Instead of squandering money, use the enjoyable “Indirect” mode of travelling.

Comparison: Another strategy to locate the most incredible travel deal is to compare flight ticket costs as much as possible. Thanks to it, you’ll be able to make decisions without hesitance or uncertainty. Because it broadens your knowledge and expertise, the comparison tactic is typically adequate. Compare all the airlines on your shortlist.

Being adaptable: If you live in the United Kingdom (UK) and want to visit Victoria Falls, you must choose the right time and dates for your vacation. You will pay more if you book a flight during a significant international holiday like Christmas or New Year’s. Flying tickets might sell out very quickly, depending on the circumstances.

Pre-booking: Book as far as you can to secure the best and most affordable flights. Almost always, making reservations three or six months in advance is a good idea. Travellers can benefit from substantial discounts, have plenty of time for reflection, add or delete any desired or unwanted items, etc.

Consequently, this article will assist you in reducing any confusion you may have about the location as it explains when to book your cheap flight, how to find inexpensive flights, how to keep your travel expenses down, and how to enjoy Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, to the fullest. So, prepare for your path with clarity. – UrbanMatter 

Continue Reading

Opinion

Zimbabwean youths drink and smoke themselves to oblivion

Published

on

BY CLAYTON MOYO

“Ah, we won’t be having this crew in the next five years. “

“They are drinking and smoking themselves to oblivion,” says one of the patriarchs as we slaughter a neighbour’s beast in my village in southwestern Zimbabwe over the weekend.

He says so as he points at one of the young lads who has taken a break to gulp down a mouthful from a small bottle of what has become a popular alcoholic beverage across rural and high-density suburbs in Zimbabwe’s urban centres.

The alcoholic volume of the beverage is not immediately given in the package, as is the norm, but observing the sobriety plunge of one who indulges in a few gulps gives absolute pointers of extraordinary potency.

In the neighbour’s cattle kraal where we slaughter the beast in preparation for a feast, there are about five more young lads who are sharing the beverage, each small empty bottle thrown away goes with a substantial dosage of inhibitions and the chatter constantly threatens to teeter into a brawl.

They are not the only ones who pass the time brawling over alcohol.

In a period of more than a month, I have travelled to many parts of Matabeleland South and Bulawayo provinces coordinating a media and information literacy programme, and the participants in our meetings have been predominantly young women and the elderly.

After a few meetings, my curiosity gives in and I inquire.

“If you care so much about having young men in your meetings, go and conduct these training sessions from that bottle store,” said Edna Mpala, an elderly lady who oversees activities at Nyandeni Community Training Centre in Matabeleland South.

“We have lost them. They have all become useless.”

It is not too hard to establish why young people in rural and urban Zimbabwe have become “useless”.

Figuring out Zimbabwe’s unemployment rate is a fool’s errand. Convincing figures are elusive and some estimates go as high as 95 percent.

The World Bank database suggests 5.2 percent as of 2021, suggesting the majority of Zimbabweans are at work.

At first glance, that is quite positive, except I quickly learn that in Zimbabwe we no longer agree on what unemployment is – the economy has become so informal that such important economic activity indicators like employment rates are fluid.

Making a quick buck selling roasted maize at a dusty street corner before municipality police scatter your stock? Tick, you are employed!

But for those living in the country, the picture is vivid. Once bustling industrial areas of Belmont and Thorngrove in the city of Bulawayo now have lifeless premises, grass overgrown right at the gates.

Where there is life, a church ministry of one sort or another has taken over, aggressively manufacturing desperate believers who endlessly spend week-day evenings and weekends petitioning their creator for a miracle that will drive out misery.

In desperate times, you choose a pacifier. Young people have a different opiate of choice.

The alcoholism and drug abuse crisis in Zimbabwe has become so palpable and alarming that even the usually non-responsive policymakers are acknowledging the problem.

For quite a while, the spectacle of zombie-like young bodies, numbed by a cocktail of substances from alcohol to whatever else the street provides, was a distant story on South African television, narrating the nyaope crisis in Johannesburg.

It was never a familiar sight in Zimbabwean communities until it was. The street pavements in Harare and Bulawayo now have, on top of uncollected heaps of refuse, unsightly human bodies, stupefied by an assortment of substances.

The streets of Zimbabwe’s towns are churning out rare destructive ingenuity on improvising harmful substances as alternatives to expensive drugs.

From boiling diapers and sanitary pads, extracting whatever chemicals hit the right places to concoctions of cough mixtures and alcohol, sobriety has no chance, the possibilities of escaping it are endless.

The concerns of the patriarch in my village are pretty valid. The consumption of copious amounts of alcohol and drugs is not leaving any healthy body behind. Mental health is already flashing red.

The World Health Organisation reports that up to 57% of mental health cases in Zimbabwe are induced by drug abuse.

Statistics often capture those who turn up at formal health institutions. Dealing with mental health illnesses in Zimbabwean society is much more complex than seeking treatment for other ailments.

The burden of shame that families carry when one member develops a mental health condition creates a whole lot of “under the radar” treatment activities that happen away from medical specialists who can diagnose and offer appropriate treatment.

Spiritual prophets and traditional healers are the go-to for ailments that are believed to be “into zabantu” — afflictions speculated to be caused by witchcraft. Mental health conditions are almost invariably believed to be stirred by the jealous agitations of a relative, neighbour or colleague. On such issues, medicines administered by doctors are believed to be impotent.

Spiritual prophets and traditional healers do not have standard treatment protocols like medical professionals, and anything goes.

That includes rituals that could worsen a patient’s mental condition.

Their shrines form the busy margins where mental patients are surreptitiously dragged by relatives.

Zimbabwe’s Mental Health Act guarantees the treatment of mental patients, and treatment and admission at government psychiatric hospitals are free of charge. Great, on paper of course, like most things in the country.

The Zimbabwean healthcare system is facing an all-embracing assault from the economic crisis which no longer has traceable phases, one cycle overrides another.

Currently, inflation that has spectacularly eroded the salaries and living conditions of health workers is emptying hospital wards. Nurses and doctors have updated their passports and found work elsewhere. Young doctors who used to bitterly complain on social media about their working conditions have gone curiously quiet. There is no point in noisily walking away.

In 2021, Zimbabwe launched the National Drug Master Plan, which “offers both an integrated and comprehensive approach that will address a range of drug-related issues”.

The background section of the plan already betrays the reluctance in tracing illicit drug use in the country as it cites statistics from the Zimbabwe Republic Police’s criminal investigations reports of 2012.

There is a yawning gap between then and 2021.

The plan rightly captures the causes of drug abuse – the first one being poverty.

For most young people, there is no doubt that poverty pushes them to illicit drug use.

The proposed implementation matrix looks comprehensive as it claims, except there is no control of the drug abusers’ factory – the economic mess.

As long as Zimbabwe provides no work opportunities for the young lads in my village in Matebeleland South and indeed the rest of the country, the small bottles of alcohol will litter the place and inebriated bodies will compete for space with uncollected refuse in alleyways and pavements.

Back in the neighbour’s kraal, we finish off the half-charred pieces of meat, coated with a bit of ash as is the tradition – when a beast falls, the men who slaughtered it have the first braai at the kraal.

The young lads agree among themselves that it is a perfect day for a proper binge, as the meat has set a “base” for more alcohol. – Mail & Guardian

This is an edited version of an essay that was a runner-up in this year’s Canon Collins Trust “Troubling Power” Essay Competition.

*Clayton Moyo, a Canon Collins PhD scholar, is a digital media enthusiast teaching broadcast media at the National University of Science and Technology in Zimbabwe. He shares media skills outside the university with citizen journalists and emerging media entrepreneurs. 

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2022 VicFallsLive. All rights reserved, powered by Advantage