Zimbabwean police detained a U.S. citizen and seized her laptop on Friday on suspicion of calling President Robert Mugabe a “Goblin” on Twitter, the first arrest since the creation of a Ministry of Cyber Security last month, her lawyers said.
The Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights said in a statement
that Martha O‘Donovan, who works for Magamba TV, which describes itself as
Zimbabwe’s leading producer of political satire, was picked up during a dawn
raid on her Harare home.
The lawyers said
the police were armed with a search warrant linked to an investigation of a
case of “undermining authority of or insulting the President”. Central to their
investigation, it said, was a post on O‘Donovan’s Twitter feed referring to a
“Goblin” whose wife and step-sons had imported a Rolls Royce, an apparent
reference to 93-year-old Mugabe even though he was not named. Recent online
reports have claimed Mugabe’s two adult sons, Robert Jr and Chatunga, have
imported at least one luxury vehicle from neighboring South Africa.
O‘Donovan’s Twitter
account was locked on Friday but a photograph on her home page referred to
#ShutdownZimbabwe2016, a series of protests in 2016 that rattled Mugabe’s
government and elicited a fierce crackdown on the streets and online. Police spokeswoman Charity Charamba said she
had no immediate information about the case. The U.S. embassy in Harare
confirmed that an American citizen had been arrested and said it was monitoring
the situation closely. If convicted, O‘Donovan faces a maximum of one year in
jail, her lawyer said.
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