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Government arrests editor, reporters over elephant poaching story

"The falsehoods have dented and tarnished the image of the (police) organisation for no apparent reason. The story does not only affect ZRP but the entire security apparatus," Charamba said.

Zimbabwe arrests editor, reporters over elephant poaching story

Zimbabwean police said on Tuesday they had arrested an editor and two reporters from a state-owned newspaper for publishing falsehoods after reporting that a police commissioner and junior officer were involved in a spate of elephant killings.

Poachers have used cyanide to kill 60 elephants in the Hwange national park in the west and the northern part of the country since late September.

Sunday Mail editor Mabasa Sasa and reporters Tinashe Farawo and Brian Chitemba were arrested on Monday and were held at a Harare police station, Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) national spokeswoman Charity Charamba told a news conference.

The newspaper group that owns the weekly newspaper, Zimpapers Ltd, said it would issue a statement later on Tuesday.

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The newspaper reported in its latest edition that an unnamed assistant police commissioner, a police officer, rangers from the parks agency and Asian businessmen were part of a syndicate being investigated for the poaching of elephants in Zimbabwe.

Charamba denied the police were investigating any of its officers for poaching. She said the three reporters would be charged with publishing or communicating false statements that were prejudicial to the state.

Police want the reporters to identify the assistant police commissioner allegedly involved in the poaching.

The three reporters are expected to appear in court by Wednesday. The charge carries a fine of $5,000 or sentence of up to 20 years upon conviction.

Charamba said police had since August this year recovered 70 elephant tusks, 30 kg of ivory, 100 kg of cyanide and arrested eight people linked to poaching.

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Elephant conservation groups said in 2013 that as many as 300 elephants died in Hwange park after poachers laced salt pans there with cyanide. The government strongly disputed the figure, saying only a few dozen animals had died.

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