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Media
organisation apologises to Supreme Court head
Mozambique's News agency, AIM, reported on 19 August 2008 that
independent daily newsheet "Mediafax" has apologised
to the President of Mozambique's Supreme Court, Mario Mangaze,
five years after it carried an opinion piece accusing him of
failing to pay land fees on 5,530 hectares of land to which
he held title.
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The author of the piece, Charles Baptista (who writes under
the pen name Edwin Hounnou), was threatened with a libel suit
by Mangaze, has now written a letter of apology admitted that
there was no truth in the allegation, published on 15 May 2003,
and that the land fees owing had, in fact, been paid.
Hounnou claims he was induced into error by an article published
in the weekly paper "Zambeze", and that his comments "were
not intended to offend Dr Mangaze". He wrote the piece "like
any other person could have done, based only on the data made
available by the report in ''Zambeze''" – an admission
that he had made no attempt to hear Mangaze's side of the story.
Hounnou claims that he had no libelous intention when he wrote
the piece, and asks for Mangaze's forgiveness.
"
Mediafax" states "in publishing the opinion of Edwin
Hounnou, we did so in the belief that he was writing with knowledge
of the case"
Having verified, from Hounnou's own letter that this was not
the case and that "his opinion piece contains falsehoods",
the paper's editorial management also apologises, and regrets
publication of the offending allegations.
Hounnou is establishing a track record for rushing into print
with allegations that have no evidence. After the December 2004
general elections, Hounnou, writing in "Zambeze" this
time, claimed that Francisco Machambisse, the national election
agent for the main opposition party, Renamo, failed to submit
the party's appeal against the election results on time, because
he had taken a bribe of a million dollars from the ruling Frelimo
Party.
Machambisse sued Hounnou and "Zambeze", and when the
case eventually came to court, in May 2007, Hounnou was found
guilty and sentenced to six months imprisonment, converted to
a fine at the rate of 20 meticais a day. He was fined an additional
4,200 meticais, bringing the total to 7,800 meticais (about 320
US dollars).
The court had no option in its verdict, since Hounnou could produce
no evidence whatever that Machambisse had been bribed. A few
weeks before the court case, Hounnou offered Machambisse an apology – which
he refused. Machambisse told AIM "They've had two years
to apologise, but only now, when it comes to court, do they offer
an apology".
The court awarded Machambisse damages, not of a million dollars,
but of a mere 80,000 meticais (3,200 dollars). None of that has
been paid, because the "Zambeze" director and editor
of the time, Salomao Moyana and Lourenco Jossias, appealed, on
the grounds that Hounnou had accepted full responsibility for
the piece.
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