By Takura Zhangazha*
The Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP), in a recent press statement issued via its Chief Spokesperson, Assistant Commissioner (AC) Charity
Charamba, gave some insight as to how it views freedom of
expression and access to information. It
was a statement, as reported both in the state controlled and private media, announcing the banning of ‘illegal
communication devices’. It turns out
these ‘illegal communication devices’ are most probably those that come in the
form of small portable radios that have Shortwave (SW) and Frequency Modulation(FM) bandwidths. In its announcement of this blanket ban,
the ZRP also indicated in the same press statement that the force was worried
about citizens who were meeting in ‘groups of 40-50’ in the evenings and
therefore allegedly in violation of the Public Order and Security Act
(POSA).
That the ZRP has deemed these devices or their distribution
illegal may be a matter that must be determined by our courts of law or where and when it relates to elections and the referendum, the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission. It would however also be important that the AC's statement also be subject to public
scrutiny and debate. And hence the
purpose of this article is to seek to examine the social import of the immediate
ban in relation to the rights of the people of Zimbabwe to freedom of
expression and freedom of association. This also because the ZRP did not issue
a blanket ban on debating the merits or de-merits of its public announcement.
In reading the reports over and about this statement from
the ZRP, one can easily surmise two things. The first that the ‘illegal communication
devices’ referred to are in fact portable radios with access to the Short Wave
frequency and that have been in use and in distribution in Zimbabwe since the days
of the liberation struggle. These devices generally have not been part of the
mainstream latter day radio technologies in Zimbabwe due to the global expansion of cheaper and clearer broadcasting
via Frequency Modulation (FM) under the aegis of the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) of which Zimbabwe is a member state and signatory. This expansion has generally led to radio
manufacturers not making as many SW frequency receiver radios.
Radios with SW frequencies
are largely manufactured for and used in countries where either there is a lack
of media diversity and pluralism or alternatively where there is underdevelopment
of the necessary infrastructure to broadcast via FM. Indeed in the past they have been used for propaganda purposes (within the context of the Cold War) but for our purposes since the liberation struggle, they have been used as platforms to access alternative information or entertainment from what would be regarded as mainstream or popularly viewed as unbalanced.
It would be however important to note that in
terms of the ITU SW radio station frequencies are essentially permitted to broadcast
across borders and are therefore not officially recognized as a violation of
the ‘sovereignty’ of a country. And in any event Zimbabwe has its own current
SW Radio station that no country has sought to close or limit its citizens from
owning these radio sets.
So, on the face
of it, while the ZRP may have perused through the Postal and
Telecommunications Act in tandem with the Broadcasting Services Act and POSA, it would
also be important for the public relations department to note
that there is no particular international restriction on SW radio broadcasts
via the ITU. Where it feels this affects its ability to implement a law, then
the police services should also talk to the relevant cabinet minister to seek bi-lateral
agreements with our neighboring countries and ask the latter not to host transmitters for SW radio frequencies.
The second issue to note about the announcement by the police
is the coincidence of the seeming simultaneous
ban on both the ‘illegal communication devices’ and ‘evening gatherings
of 40-50 people’. What is apparent is
that it is most likely the police are aware that most SW radio stations, including
those that specialize on Zimbabwean issues, broadcast most clearly in the evenings
and a good number of people tune into their programmes. Except that due to the
general shortage of SW radio-sets I cited earlier on in this article, Zimbabwean
citizens will gather in small groups to listen to a singular set.
This was the
case during the liberation struggle and even though we are no longer at war,
this appears to be the case in contemporary times. It would be somewhat unfair to label such a
development a ‘conspiracy’ as appears to be the case from AC Charamba’s statement. Instead this development is more indicative of a willingness
by ordinary Zimbabweans to listen to alternative and internationally legal SW radio stations of their own
volition and not in aide of any conspiracy around elections or any other
matter. If it were within the purview of the ZRPs mandate, it would have been
preferable that they explain what is particularly wrong that is communicated by
these SW radio stations that is not broadcast via the nationally licensed FM
radio stations.
In the same vein, it is also important that the ZRP make
clear how their blanket ban relates to the use of mobile telephony to access
either SW or FM radio and whether mobile telephones fall within the ambit of
their term, ‘illegal communication devices’. This too would be the same for
the world wide web and its contents as well as its reach or its ability to be
shared between individuals or ‘gatherings.
From a civilian perspective, I am aware it is important that the public
understands that the ZRP does not make the law, it implements it. Indeed the onus resides in civilians (inclusive of security services when they are off duty) to lobby government to effect changes to the law via their
political leaders. It however remains the prerogative of civilians to also
assess the performance of the ZRP in tandem not only with the law but with the
values, spirit and letter of the Constitution of Zimbabwe. In the case of SW radio devices, it is not so much their technical ability to be listened to by Zimbabweans that should be the issue. Instead it should be the ability of citizens to enjoy the
right to receive and impart information without undue hindrance that is paramount and in an age where the more free and technologically sound a country's domestic media is, the less it has reason to fear information coming from elsewhere.
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity (takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
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