Journalists harassed at public hearing to debate Zimbabwean constitutional amendments. - JURIST - News
Summary
News kremlin.ru , CC BY 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) on Friday called on on Zimbabwean authorities to investigate harassment and violence against journalists which occurred during a public hearing discussing a bill to extend the President’s term limit. CPJ Africa Director, Angela Quintal, stated: Blocking journalists, harassing them, and forcing them to delete their footage is a blatant attempt to censor their news coverage and control what the public can hear, read and see. First introduced in February, the Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment (No. 3) Bill introduces a number of reforms to the Zimbabwean constitution, including extending the term limit for the President from fives years to seven years. Supporters of the bill, speaking to Al Jazeera , hope that by having Parliamentarian vote for the president, it will reduce instances of political violence In advance of the hearings, Amnesty International urged Zimbabwean authorities to guarantee freedom of expression, citing concerns about previous instances of violence against opposition figures.
News kremlin.ru , CC BY 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) on Friday called on on Zimbabwean authorities to investigate harassment and violence against journalists which occurred during a public hearing discussing a bill to extend the President’s term limit. CPJ Africa Director, Angela Quintal, stated: Blocking journalists, harassing them, and forcing them to delete their footage is a blatant attempt to censor their news coverage and control what the public can hear, read and see. First introduced in February, the Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment (No. 3) Bill introduces a number of reforms to the Zimbabwean constitution, including extending the term limit for the President from fives years to seven years. Supporters of the bill, speaking to Al Jazeera , hope that by having Parliamentarian vote for the president, it will reduce instances of political violence In advance of the hearings, Amnesty International urged Zimbabwean authorities to guarantee freedom of expression, citing concerns about previous instances of violence against opposition figures.
## Article Content
News
kremlin.ru
,
CC BY 4.0
, via Wikimedia Commons
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) on Friday
called
on on Zimbabwean authorities to investigate harassment and violence against journalists which occurred during a public hearing discussing a bill to extend the President’s term limit.
On March 30, journalists and citizens gathered in Harare, the capital of Zimbabwe, in the City Sports Center for four days of debate about the new bill. On the
second day of debates
supporters of the governing Zapu PF party “stormed the venue”, chanting party slogans, preventing the opposition from speaking, and preventing journalists from leaving unless they delete their footage. An anonymous woman journalist reported having alcohol thrown on her and being trampled on by a stampede of people.
CPJ Africa Director, Angela Quintal, stated:
Blocking journalists, harassing them, and forcing them to delete their footage is a blatant attempt to censor their news coverage and control what the public can hear, read and see. Zimbabwean authorities must ensure those responsible are held accountable and that journalists are free to report on matters of public interest.
First introduced in February, the
Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment (No. 3) Bill
introduces a number of reforms to the Zimbabwean constitution, including extending the term limit for the President from fives years to seven years. The bill also changes the process for electing the president. Previously, the Zimbabwean people directly elected the president. Now, members of Parliament vote after every general election or when necessary to fill a vacancy in the office of the president.
The bill will allow current president, Emmerson Mnangagwa, to stay in power until 2030. Critics fear that the new legislation will bar anyone but party leaders from the presidency. Supporters of the bill,
speaking to Al Jazeera
, hope that by having Parliamentarian vote for the president, it will reduce instances of political violence
In advance of the hearings, Amnesty International
urged
Zimbabwean authorities to guarantee freedom of expression, citing concerns about previous instances of violence against opposition figures. In April 2025, President Mnangagwa
signed a law
which restricting freedom of association and freedom of expression. Additionally, President Mnangagwa is currently under
sanctions
by the the US government.
---
## Expert Analysis
### Merits
N/A
### Areas for Consideration
N/A
### Implications
- The bill will allow current president, Emmerson Mnangagwa, to stay in power until 2030.
- Critics fear that the new legislation will bar anyone but party leaders from the presidency.
- Supporters of the bill, speaking to Al Jazeera , hope that by having Parliamentarian vote for the president, it will reduce instances of political violence In advance of the hearings, Amnesty International urged Zimbabwean authorities to guarantee freedom of expression, citing concerns about previous instances of violence against opposition figures.
### Expert Commentary
This article covers president, journalists, bill topics. Readability: Flesch-Kincaid grade 0.0. Word count: 365.
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