When Telling the Truth Becomes a Crime: Inside Zimbabwe’s Assault on Press Freedom
By Shelton Muchena| While the constitution Zimbabwe enshrines freedom of expression and media liberty, telling the truth has increasingly become a perilous act.
Over the past 18 months, the county’s media landscape has changed dramatically.
Journalists once accustomed to reporting on corruption, official excess and human rights issues now do so under constant threat of arrest, prosecution and intimidation.
Today, independent reporting in Zimbabwe is not only a profession it has become an act of courage that routinely puts lives and liberty on the line.
“It’s fear by design,” says one senior Zimbabwean editor, speaking on condition of anonymity. “You don’t need to lock up every journalist you just make sure they fear the law and fear what the law can do to them.”
Criminalising Journalism
In July 2025, Faith Zaba, editor of the Zimbabwe Independent, was arrested in Harare and charged with “undermining the authority of the President” after publishing a satirical column in the paper’s Muckraker column. She was denied immediate bail and spent days in custody, despite known medical concerns a move that drew condemnation from international rights groups.
“It’s an assault on freedom of expression,” said Khanyo Farisè, Amnesty International’s Senior Researcher for East and Southern Africa. “Journalism is not a crime.”
Only weeks earlier, Blessed Mhlanga, a senior journalist at privately owned Heart and Soul TV, had been detained for 72 days under Section 164 of the Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Act, accused of “inciting violence” for interviews he conducted with a prominent war veteran.
These actions are emblematic of a government increasingly willing to use broad, vaguely defined laws to stifle independent reporting.
A Pattern of Suppression
The crackdown is not confined to high‑profile media houses. In February 2026, Gideon Madzikatidze, a reporter for the online news site Bulawayo24, was detained for nearly a week under cybercrime and broadcasting laws for publishing an article alleging bribery by a local company charges that could see him jailed for more than a decade.
In recent months, another journalist, Pellagia Mupurwa, faced threats and detention over alleged “false news”, drawing condemnation from global press watchdogs.
These incidents are part of a larger crackdown that has left editors self‑censoring stories and entire newsrooms questioning whether critical reporting is worth the risk. In many outlets, senior editorial staff now routinely review investigative pieces not only for accuracy but for potential legal exposure.
Journalists Speak Out
“I’ve been followed, phoned at odd hours, my emails intercepted,” says a Zimbabwean broadcast journalist whose work has covered corruption and human rights. “It’s not a matter of if you will be targeted it’s when.”
Another journalist, who asked not to be named for fear of repercussions, described the psychological toll: “You start to second‑guess every line you write. And that’s the goal to make you doubt the very act of reporting.”
International press freedom indices reflect this reality. Zimbabwe is ranked in the lower half of the 2025 World Press Freedom Index, ahead only of a handful of Southern African Development Community states, signalling continuing risks for media practitioners.
Voices of Opposition and Civil Society
Opposition leaders and civil society organisations have widely condemned the treatment of journalists. “The continued detention of Blessed Mhlanga was a blow to human rights and press freedom,” said a senior opposition figure after the journalist’s 2025 arrest, highlighting how such actions erode democratic norms.
Human rights monitors also warn that the Zimbabwean judiciary and law enforcement are being used to suppress dissent and discourage independent investigation. “[Authorities] must stop misusing the criminal justice system to silence journalists,” said Amnesty International in response to the detention of reporters earlier last year.
The International Cost
The erosion of press freedom in Zimbabwe has drawn the attention of global bodies. Press freedom groups, regional organisations and international human rights coalitions have repeatedly called for the release of detained journalists, the dropping of charges, and the reform of laws that criminalise legitimate reporting.
The Press Council of South Africa Yet the chilling effect persists. With donors increasingly wary of supporting independent media under hostile legal conditions, Zimbabwe’s media sector faces an uncertain future as funding dries up and journalistic independence wanes.
Beyond Borders: A Universal Struggle
Zimbabwe’s challenges reflect a broader, global struggle over free expression a battle being fought from Harare to Washington, from Nairobi to New Delhi. When press freedom is under attack anywhere, the public’s right to information, accountability and justice is diminished everywhere.
For Zimbabwe’s journalists, the risk remains raw and urgent. “We are not just reporting the news,” one journalist told this reporter. “We are defending the right of the public to know the truth.”
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