×
NewsDay

AMH is an independent media house free from political ties or outside influence. We have four newspapers: The Zimbabwe Independent, a business weekly published every Friday, The Standard, a weekly published every Sunday, and Southern and NewsDay, our daily newspapers. Each has an online edition.

Govt won’t hesitate shutting down Internet again: Mutodi

News
INFORMATION, Publicity and Broadcasting Services deputy minister Energy Mutodi yesterday warned that government would not hesitate to shut down the Internet again if need arises and claimed Zimbabweans were primitive and have no understanding of their constitutional rights.

INFORMATION, Publicity and Broadcasting Services deputy minister Energy Mutodi yesterday warned that government would not hesitate to shut down the Internet again if need arises and claimed Zimbabweans were primitive and have no understanding of their constitutional rights.

BY OBEY MANAYITI

Mutodi’s claim came in the face of a recent High Court ruling that outlawed a recent Internet shutdown ordered by government to control flow of information during riots.

The government was roundly criticised for showing dictatorial tendencies by shutting down the Internet .

However, Mutodi said government would not hesitate to do it again because Zimbabweans are still “backward”.

“The Internet shutdown was not illegal as such. The only issue that arose is that the person (State Security minister Owen Ncube) who ordered the shutdown is not the rightful person to do that,” Mutodi said.

“Government can invoke the Interception of Communications Act because that is part of our law. Whenever the need arises, government will invoke that.

People can criticise all they want, but that is the law.

“People that say Zimbabwe is modern are mistaken. Zimbabwe still has primitive people with primitive minds who don’t understand the meaning of peaceful demonstrations. When people go and loot, cause violence instead of peaceful demonstrations, then is that not a sign that we are still backward.”

Mutodi said Zimbabweans were given rights by the Constitution, but they do not understand how far they should exercise their rights.

During the shutdown, seemingly calculated to blackout the broadcast of worsening human rights abuses, a number of institutions complained on the government’s conduct.

MDC spokesperson Jacob Mafume yesterday said Mutodi was out of order.

“Has he lost his mind? He and his government are the ones that are primitive. They are happy when the population is in pain. They believe it is they that must have a good life. In fact Mutodi is a glorified hoodlum and how he finds himself in government is a question for the ages,” he said.