2008/07/22
THE photographs of the tortured body of an opposition official are blurry but chilling.
Posted on the This is Zimbabwe Internet blog, they show charred, lacerated limbs and blank eyes staring out from the face of the official, Gift Mutsvungunu, frozen in a death grimace.
A note accompanying the pictures says the picture quality is bad because the photographer was shaking with fear.
Increasingly, Zimbabweans are going online and using cellphone text messages to share stories of life and death in a country where the traditionally independent media have been all but silenced, and from which reporters from most international media have been barred.
“Any organisation or NGO working in the area of promotion of free expression is at risk,” Bev Clark, one of the founders of the Kubatana blogging forum, said via e-mail.
“Zimbabwe is encased in fear.”
Harare-based Kubatana is a network of non-profit organisations that runs a blogging forum. The forum relies on 13 bloggers in Zimbabwe, who e-mail submissions to an administrator who posts them to the site.
The network also reaches beyond the Web by sending text messages to 3800 subscribers.
Zimbabwe’s bloggers are mainly opposition activists whose themes range from HIV/Aids, to the country’s economic meltdown, to President Robert Mugabe’s thuggery.
The underground networks can be forums for unsubstantiated rumour, but provide valuable independent information and can even make news.
In late June, the This is Zimbabwe blog started a letter-writing campaign against a German firm that was supplying paper to print the sinking Zimbabwean dollar.
After about a week, the international media picked up the story and the company, Giesecke & Devrient, announced it would stop dealing with Zimbabwe.
Another typical posting simply lists names of victims of political violence, each accompanied by one sentence on how the person was beaten to death.
In many cases it’s impossible to tell who is doing the postings because the risks are so great. Government eavesdroppers are believed to be roaming the Web and intercepting cell phone calls, especially after a law was passed last year allowing authorities to monitor phone calls and the Internet.
Deputy information minister Bright Matonga said the legislation was modelled after counter-terrorism legislation in the US and the UN. “Those who have something to hide should be very much worried, but those who have nothing to hide should not worry,” he said.
Only the state-run TV and radio stations and The Herald, a government newspaper, provide daily news in Zimbabwe.
There are no independent radio stations broadcasting from within the country.
Journalists without hard-to-come- by government accreditation find it hard to operate.
The government’s grip on the media tightened in the lead-up to last month’s presidential election runoff, in which Mugabe was the only candidate after Morgan Tsvangirai dropped out because of violence against his supporters.
That leaves the Internet and cellphones.
Internet World Stats, an online organisation that compiles statistics on Internet usage worldwide, estimates 1.3 million Zimbabweans – about 11 percent of the population – were using the Internet as of March 2008. — Sapa-AP
|