| Police seize illegal communication devices |
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| Wednesday, 20 February 2013 00:00 |
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Although police could not give figures yesterday, sources said hundreds of such devices, including specially designed radios, have been confiscated, especially in the rural areas. It is illegal for anyone to possess or operate signal transmission equipment other than in accordance with a licence issued by either the Broadcasting Authority of Zimbabwe or Postal and Telecommunications Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe. Police said there were groups of between 40 and 50 people who were gathering at night in various parts of the country for political activities. She warned the distributors and recipients that police would not tolerate such acts. “Some are taking advantage of needy communities and in the guise of helping them, they also hand over these communication devices. Asst Comm Charamba said police operations were guided by intelligence and they had it on good authority that “very unpleasant developments” were taking place countrywide. She said it was not a secret that there were laws governing the activities of individuals, groups of people and political parties. “Groups of as many as 40-50 people are gathering in the middle of the night in pursuance of unknown political agendas. Asst Comm Charamba warned people aligned to any political party to desist from holding such meetings. President Mugabe recently said voting in the referendum on the draft Constitution would be conducted over one day, on March 16, with polling stations opening at 7am and closing at 7pm. The proclamation by President Mugabe was contained in the Government Gazette which validated the referendum date through Statutory Instrument 19 of 2013. In August last year, Media, Information and Publicity Minister Webster Shamu said pirate radio stations would never win the battle against liberators of this country. He said imperialists were using the weakness of pirate radio stations to reverse the gains of the liberation struggle. |