Thursday 21 January 2010

Journalist flees Zimbabwe after death threat

CPJ: Journalist flees Zimbabwe after death threat
Written by Martin
Thursday, 21 January 2010 08:20
New York: Freelance journalist Stanley Kwenda ,a contributor to the private weekly The Zimbabwean, fled the country on Friday after he said he received a telephone threat from a high-ranking police officer, according to the paper’s editor, Wilf Mbanga.
The reporter identified the caller as Chief Superintendent Chrispen Makedenge, Mbanga said. The caller allegedly said that Kwenda would be dead by the weekend in connection with an article in The Zimbabwean, according to news reports. Kwenda had quoted relatives of Makedenge’s late wife making critical comments about the senior police officer, Mbanga said. Phone calls made by CPJ to Makedenge went unanswered. Police spokesman Wayne Bvujzijena told CPJ that no complaint had been filed and no investigation opened. He said police knew only what had been reported online.
“We call on the commissioner of police to thoroughly investigate this serious allegation against a staff member and to ensure that justice is served,” said CPJ’s Africa Program Coordinator Tom Rhodes. “Just when it seemed that the media in Zimbabwe was emerging from years of repression, a journalist has been forced to flee for his life.” Local reports have said that Makedenge orchestrated the 2008 arrests of 32 former opposition party members and human rights activists, including Andrison Manyere, a freelance photojournalist. Manyere is free on bail but still faces several politically motivated criminal charges.
Manyere was detained by police for two hours on January 18 while filming a demonstration by members of Women and Men of Zimbabwe Arise, according to the press freedom group Media Institute of Southern Africa.

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Michael Chipato

Michael Chipato
Media and Social Consultant

Michael delivering a paper- Journalism in a Dictatorship

Michael delivering a paper- Journalism in a Dictatorship
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Tuku meets Mike in Birmingham 2008
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Backing vocalist for Alick Macheso in Liecester with Mike
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Macheso crew in Liecester 2008

Macheso crew in Liecester 2008

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Lord Mayor, Jeff and Tawanda
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Michael and Chiwoniso Maraire , an exiled musician. Now lives in the USA
Mike and Chioneso Maraire in Birmingham 08

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Birmingham, West Midlands, United Kingdom
Michael Chipato is a social and development scientist currently living in Birmingham.Over the years issues pertaining social inequalities, dictatorship, political oppression and gender disparities have been his research focus.As an artist, journalist and academic Michael's philosophy of life is greatly influenced by Léopold Sédar Senghor (9 October 1906 – 20 December 2001) ... a Senegalese poet, politician, and cultural theorist who served as the first president of Senegal (1960–1980). Senghor was the first African to sit as a member of the Académie française. He was also the founder of the political party called the Senegalese Democratic Bloc. He is regarded by many as one of the most important African intellectuals of the 20th century. Senghor created the concept of Négritude, an important intellectual movement that sought to assert and to valorize what they believed to be distinctive African characteristics, values, and aesthetics..He does not condone oppression and violence in any shape or form.

Michael Chipato

Michael Chipato
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