
INFORMATION, Broadcasting and Tourism Minister Given Lubinda has said he is hopeful that Government in collaboration with other stakeholders will manage to put in place a Freedom of Information (FOI) Bill within?the next six months.
Mr Lubinda said Government and the media houses in Zambia were working together on establishing media legislation especially the FOI regarding the operations of the media in the country.
He said this yesterday when he received 34 students and six teachers from Sweden and Kamwala High School who paid a courtesy call on him.
The 17 students and three teachers from Sweden are on a 16-day cultural exchange programme to Zambia that started between the two countries in 2004. Among the students are media students.
Mr Lubinda said Government was working with the media to come up with legislation regarding the operations of the media in the country especially the FOI Act which he hoped would come to conclusion within six months.
He was happy with the way the public media was working from the time the Patriotic Front(PF) took office.
Mr Lubinda said there had been a revolutionary in the manner the public media was operating from a highly contemptuous public media to a balanced one where everyone was happy adding that he was proud to be part of the public media where people were not raising their fingers on its coverage.
He said it was refreshing to see opposition political parties being covered in the public media.
Mr Lubinda who is Government spokesperson announced that his ministry would soon introduce weekly meetings with the media to attend to their various concerns adding that Government was providing an enabling environment for the media in the country to operate freely.
He was happy that the Swedish students had found time to visit Zambia on an exchange programe that would enhance their cultural learning of Zambia and life experiences of the Zambian people.
Mr Lubinda said Government was also intending to open at least a television and radio station in each of the nine provinces of Zambia.
He said the exchange programe was important in that it was linking? people to people and people to development saying there was no better way to develop the world apart from learning each other’s culture.
Mr Lubinda encouraged both countries to continue with the programme in order to foster development.
He said it was the PF Government’s wish to ensure there was an increased number of media houses in the country and that would be done through promotion of investment in media.
Mr Lubinda said it was also Government’s intention to promote and market Zambia so that the country could become a hub of tourism in the sub-Saharan region.
He said Zambia was best placed to become as such because of its?central location and the country was endowed with a beautiful climate change apart from having warm people.
Mr Lubinda told the students during the question and answer session? that it was wrong for people to conclude that there was no freedom of ?the Press in Zambia just because the country did not yet have a law on FOI Bill.
He said the biggest challenges that the media in Zambia was facing was financial, limited equipment and personnel.
And Swedish delegation leader Lennart Franden said he was happy with the exchange programme as it helped in exchange of information and?cultures that in the end contributed to the development of the two countries.
[Times of Zambia]