The Media Institute of
Southern Africa (MISA) chapter in Swaziland (recently
renamed Eswatini by the kingdom’s absolute monarch King Mswati III)
said it saw an ‘increasingly worrying development’ with state forces attacking
journalists.
MISA was commenting on the
case of Times of Swaziland journalist
Andile Nsibande who was attacked by police officers and prison warders on 30
August 2018 at Nhlangano where workers protested about low levels of pay.
‘They demanded that he should
delete the pictures he had taken, and then proceeded to beat him up,’’ MISA
reported.
It stated, ‘The law
enforcement agents ought to know that journalists play a public service of
disseminating information that emaSwati [Swazi people] need desperately to make
informed decisions and choices.
It added, ‘Whosoever
attacks journalists in line of duty, stands accused of violating emaSwati’s
constitutional right to information.’
MISA said it was concerned,
‘such acts are happening during the process of national
elections when emaSwati expect the media practitioners to execute their
duties without fear. Such attacks are bound to instil fear in the media
practitioners.’
Separately, the Panos
Institute Southern Africa said the state attacks
on journalists were unconstitutional. In a statement
it said, ‘Journalism is not a crime, but is a freedom that must be cherished
and protected by all who are concerned about the region’s development. Any
attack on press freedom is a blow on the implementation of poverty eradication
interventions, as the media is a strategic ally in the roll-out of national
development programmes.
‘We appeal to the authorities at the Kingdom of
Eswatini to urgently put in place measures to protect journalists from
unscrupulous government officials and security agents.’
The fresh calls came after MISA Zimbabwe chapter
appealed to the Southern African
Development Community (SADC) to look into the continued state-sponsored
violations against journalists.
It added, ‘It is high time the regional body condemned the continued use of state security agents to violate fundamental rights such as the right to free expression and the right to access information.’
It added, ‘It is high time the regional body condemned the continued use of state security agents to violate fundamental rights such as the right to free expression and the right to access information.’
MISA Zimbabawe called the
police attack, ‘an increasingly worrying development involving state security
agents’. It added, ‘This attack is the latest in a series of state-sponsored
attacks against journalists in the kingdom of Eswatini, as Swaziland is now
called. On 7 February 2018, a photojournalist with the Swazi Observer was
attacked after he took pictures of a convoy of overcrowded vehicles
transporting prison wardens.’
It added, ‘Another
photojournalist with the Sunday Observer was attacked on 13 July 2018
after he took pictures of government vehicles parked outside a deputy prime
minister’s office. Police forced the
photojournalist to delete pictures he had taken.’
See
also
Swaziland Police Beat-Up Journalist Photographing Them Attacking, Shooting At Textile Workers
Swaziland Police Beat-Up Journalist Photographing Them Attacking, Shooting At Textile Workers
Media
Freedom Group Calls On SADC To Investigate Swaziland For ‘State-Sponsored’
Attacks On Journalists
‘Editor
Flees After Death Threat’
https://swazimedia.blogspot.co.uk/2018/01/editor-flees-after-death-threat.html
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