Showing posts with label Media and Publishing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Media and Publishing. Show all posts

Mark Chavhunduka Zimbabwe Publisher



As founding editor of Zimbabwe's independent Sunday newspaper, the Standard, the award-winning journalist and publisher Mark Chavunduka, who died aged 36, was a champion for media freedom in southern Africa.
His paper became a symbol of resistance among his country's journalists, and a thorn in the flesh of President Robert Mugabe's government. He exposed the corruption and political intimidation rife in Zimbabwe, and his outspokenness made the Standard an internationally recognised voice for those opposed to Mugabe's tyranny.
Chavunduka entered the limelight in 1999, when the Standard's chief writer, Ray Choto, reported on widespread Zimbabwean army unrest over the deployment of up to 14,000 troops in the civil war then raging in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Choto claimed that 23 disgruntled soldiers had been detained for inciting mutiny against Mugabe.
For more than 10 days, Chavunduka and Choto were detained incommunicado at Cranborne barracks nearHarare. Their lawyer, Simon Bull, said both men were subjected to electric shocks on their genitals, hands and feet by military interrogators, and had their heads submerged in drums of water.
They were also blindfolded, stripped naked, made to do push-ups in the rain, and to roll in wet grass to clean the blood from their bodies after beating.
Independent medical sources confirmed the torture allegations, and the incident, seen by many as the most outrageous attack on press freedom in Zimbabwe since independence, drew worldwide condemnation.
President Mugabe, however, refused to condemn the torture. Instead, he threatened "very stern measures" against the independent press, warned writers not to antagonise the army, and ignored a court order to release the two journalists.
Chavunduka was born into a prominent Zimbabwean family in the capital, Salisbury (now Harare). His father, Dr Dexter Chavunduka, was Zimbabwe's first black veterinary surgeon, and a member of parliament nominated by Mugabe for his expertise in animal husbandry.
As vice chancellor of the University of Zimbabwe, Mark's uncle, Professor Gordon Chavunduka, a veteran nationalist, had conferred an honorary degree on Mugabe. His aunt, Sarah Kachingwe, was a top civil servant.
Educated at the prestigious St George's secondary school, Chavunduka graduated from Harare Polytechnic with a diploma in mass communication and journalism. He began his career as a business reporter, and later news editor, with the Financial Gazette.
In 1991, aged 24, he became the youngest editor of a national publication when he took over the monthly magazine, Parade, whose readership he increased to more than two million.
He became editor of the Standard in April 1997, and, under him, the circulation rose from 12,000 to 37,000.

After his release, he was treated for post-traumatic stress disorder at the London-based Medical Foundation for the Treatment of Torture Victims.
Two years ago, Chavunduka won a Nieman fellowship atHarvard University, but, last year, returned home.
"My family all said I should have stayed in the US, but I am so angry about the way we were treated," he said, "and I won't give the government the satisfaction of knowing I've run away."
Last April, he resigned as editor of the Standard after taking over the majority shareholding in the local Thomson Publications (Pvt).
The cause of the illness that led to his death was not announced. He is survived by his wife, two daughters and a son.
Mark Gova Chavunduka, journalist and publisher, bornNovember 28 1965; died November 11, 2002.

Trevor Ncube Zimbabwe Media Mogul



Trevor Ncube is the Executive Deputy Chairman of the Mail & Guardian Media Group (South Africa). He is also the founder, owner and executive chairman of two newspapers in Zimbabwe, namely the Zimbabwe Independent and The Standard.

Ncube also owns Munn Marketing, a magazine and newspaper distribution company in Zimbabwe, and StrandMultiprint, acommercial and newspaper printing company.

Ncube started in journalism in 1989, when he was appointed assistant editor of the Financial Gazette in Zimbabwe. In 1991 he was promoted to Executive Editor and in 1994 received the Zimbabwean Editor of the Year award. Ncube was the President ofPrint Media South Africa and Chair of the Newspaper Association of South Africa from 2004-2008. He was chair of the board of the Southern African Regional Poverty Network (2004-2007) and the Institute for War & Peace Reporting (2004-2008). Ncube also served on the international board of the World Association of Newspapers (2004-2008) based in Paris. Ncube holds a BA honours (first class) in economic history from the University of Zimbabwe. He completed the Said Business School, University of Oxford, Advanced Management and Leadership Programme in June/July 2009.

He was born in Bulawayo in 1962. Ncube was awarded a Print Media S.A. Fellowship in 2006. He was awarded the InternationalPublishers Association Freedom Prize Award 2007. He has also won the German Africa Award 2008. He has undertaken speaking engagements across the world. Ncube was recently appointed co-chair of the Africa Media Initiative.

He is married to Nyaradzo and they have a son Keith, 22 years old, and a daughter Maya, 3 years old. He loves reading, is a keen golfer and loves traveling. Ncube is a devout Christian.