MACRA bans Malawi radios to cover demos live

Malawi Communications Regulatory Authority (Macra) officials have banned private radio stations in the country from broadcasting or reporting live  on the progress of the nationwide anti-government demonstrations this Thursday.

Consumers Association of Malawi (Cama) have organised the protests in a bid to force President Joyce Banda’s governmnet to reconsider its economic policies which have brought alot of suffering on Malawians – mostly the recommendations by International Monetray Fund (IMF) to devalue the Kwacha and keep it floating.

In a brief statement issued Wednesday evening and signed by MACRA’s Director General Charles Nsaliwa which Nyasa Times possess, the communications regulator said covering the protests live would incite violence elsewhere.

The Malawi Chapter of the Media Institute of Southern Africa has since appealed to all journalists and media houses to exercise highest level of professionalism when covering the protests.

Charles Msaliwa Macra Director General : No live coverage for demos

Misa Malawi chairman Anthony Kasunda said the media should “publish stories that are balanced, fair to all sides and do not promote or insight violence or hatred.”

And MACRA’s boss said they hope the radio stations would abide by the regulator’s directive.

However,  MACRA closed down three privately owned radio stations in Blantyre for allegedly reporting live the anti-government demonstration against the late president Bingu wa Mutharika’s administration which were held on July 20, 2011.

Radio stations that were affected with the closure were Capital FM, Malawi Institute of Journalism FM and Joy FM. This happened a day after MACRA directed the radio stations to stop broadcasting live reports on the anti-government demonstrations organized by civil society groups which left 20 people dead.

MACRA also ordered ISPs (Internet service providers) to bock Malawi news websites and social media networks in a bid to stop the coordination of demonstrations claiming that such coverage may incite violence.

Nyasa Times  experienced massive and repeated distributed denial-of-service (DDOS) attacks that brought down its servers and somehow disrupted its coverage of the protests.

However the U.S. government condemned the blocking of social media networks in Malawi as well as the ban imposed on radio stations.

Then U.S. State Department spokesperson Heide Bronke Fulton said in a statement that  the Malawian government’s attempt to prohibit its citizens from marching and the ban on independent media coverage undermine democracy and the rule of law that Malawians cherish.

Billy Banda, executive director of Malawi Watch, a human rights organization, told Bloomberg on Wednesday that President Banda’s refusal to reverse her policies even as discontent mounts may undermine her support in a national election scheduled for 2014.

“The problem with our president is that she is busy marketing herself, building her profile as Joyce Banda the person, while neglecting the larger picture which is the government,” he is quoted saying. “The reforms are taking time to register positive results and this is frustrating many Malawians. The euphoria people had after she took over government has waned. If she is not careful, this will cost her dearly.”

 

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