Authorities in Mozambique should immediately reverse
plans to impose prohibitively high financial charges that unduly target
independent media, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today.
A July 23,
2018, government decree outlined massive hikes in registration fees to be paid
to the government-run Gabinete de Informação, a bureaucratic body that
facilitates media registration.
The decree states that new fees will take effect on
August 23, 2018. It comes as the Mozambican government looks to sign natural
gas contracts with multinational corporations, and hold municipal elections in
October 2018 and general elections in 2019, according to the Mozambican state
news agency (AIM) and Agence France-Presse.
"Not only do these fee increases by the
Mozambican government make it practically impossible for independent press to
continue working, they also lay bare a flagrant attempt to undermine
transparency ahead of elections and as the country brokers natural resource
deals," Angela Quintal, CPJ's Africa program coordinator, said from
Johannesburg, South Africa. "The Mozambican government should reverse the
decree mandating such outrageous fee increases for media."
The decree includes a chart of fees for various types
of media outlets and journalists, including for registration, licensing, and
license renewal. Accreditation for foreign correspondents living in Mozambique
will cost 500,000 metical (US$8,630), according to the decree. Tom Bowker,
editor with the privately owned Zitamar News, told CPJ that the previous
administrative fee for foreign correspondents' accreditation was
"insignificant" and came out to around US$5.
Community radio stations will need to pay a 50,000
metical (US$855) licensing tax as well as a 3,000 metical (US$50) annual
licensing tax, according to the decree. Erik Charas, publisher of the privately
owned Verdade newspaper, told CPJ that the previous annual licensing tax for
community radio stations was 2,000 metical (US$34).
Charas emphasized that the fees imposed by the July 23
decree were "crippling" and that Mozambicans would not be able to pay
them.
Tomás Vieira Mário, president of Mozambique's press
regulator, the Conselho Superior da Comunicação Social, told CPJ that he
believes the fees imposed are "illegal" because they violate the
right to freedom of expression enshrined in Mozambique's constitution. The
government should move to nullify and renegotiate the decree, he said.
Mário also said the regulator, which is made of 11
members--six appointed by the presidency and parliament, and five appointed by
the journalists' union and media companies--first learned about the decree when
it was published as law in the government bulletin, and should have been
consulted beforehand. An initial conversation between journalists and the head
of Gabinete de Informação took place on August 10, and a second meeting is
scheduled for August 21, Fernando Lima, chairman of the privately owned,
independent media cooperative MediaCoop, told CPJ.
Cecilia Napido, a public employee with Gabinete de
Informação, told CPJ over WhatsApp messages in Portuguese that the government
did consider press freedom when forming the decree and the new fees were
introduced to "make the industry sustainable."
Yesterday, influential members of the Mozambican media
community--including CEPL (Emergency Committee for the Protection of
Liberties), MISA-Mozambique (Mozambican chapter of the Media Institute of
Southern Africa), AEJ (Association of Journalistic Companies), FORCOM (National
Forum of Community Radios), CIP (Center for Public Integrity), and OAM
(Mozambican Bar Association)--sent a petition to the national ombudsman, Isaac
Chande. The petition requested support to have Mozambique's constitutional
council review the decree's constitutionality and legality, according to a
press release from the groups.
Repeated calls to Jaime BasÃlio Monteiro, Mozambican
minister of the interior, went unanswered. Mozambican Prime Minister Carlos
Agostinho do Rosário hung up when a CPJ representative called and identified
himself. WhatsApp messages to Rosário asking to speak about Mozambican
journalists' concerns about the fees were marked as read but went unanswered.
EDITOR'S NOTE: The text has been modified in the
eighth paragraph to correct the fact that Fernando Lima was not physically at
the August 10 meeting.
Mozambican government imposes crippling fees on independent media
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Thursday, August 16, 2018
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