HOME Affairs Minister Lameck Mangani has directed the registrar of societies to come up with details about the Press Association of Zambia (PAZA) executive committee to ascertain the leadership’s legality. But former PAZA president Hicks Sikazwe cautioned against losing focus on the current debate on media regulation by politicising the collaboration between PAZA and the Press Freedom Committee of The Post.
The Zambia Union of Journalists (ZUJ) also defended the association saying there was nothing sinister about signing a memorandum of understanding with another professional association. Mr Mangani said in an interview yesterday that as far as the Government was concerned the association’s executive committee could have been operating illegally.
“As far as we are concerned the operation of PAZA is illegal and it is for this reason that I have asked the Registrar of Societies to establish when the association held the last meeting,” he said.
He said he wanted the law enforcement agencies to establish if receiving money from another institution was not tantamount to corruption and if there was no motive in giving the association money.
Mr Sikazwe, who is immediate past president of PAZA, said politicising the PAZA-PFC relationship would shift attention from the important issue and derail the establishment of the much needed self regulatory media body.
“Since the Government has provided leadership by embracing dialogue over the matter (media regulation), calls to impeach the PAZA executive are against the very spirit of dialogue fostered by Government early this month,” he said. He said only PAZA members can remove the executive and not external political interests.
He said the current executive must be given a chance to put its house in order but implored them to call for an annual general meeting earlier than November this year.
Mr Sikazwe said there was nothing wrong with a media organisation collaborating with another on a common issue adding that when he was PAZA president, the association worked with the Media Institute of Southern Africa to lobby for media reforms. “It was that collaboration between MISA and PAZA that we formed the MECOZ which appears to have taken a back seat,” he said.
And ZUJ said the attacks on PAZA executive were uncalled for and an infringement on the rights of media bodies. ZUJ president Morgan Chonya said in a statement in Lusaka yesterday the association was concerned at the present debates.
[Times of Zambia]