On April 3, Barry Bearak was arrested in Harare on charges of "committing journalism" and locked in a Zimbabwean prison. The New York Times reporter now tells the story of his imprisonment, which involved four days of negotiating the murky legal system with the help of one of the country's top human rights lawyers, and finally gaining his freedom.
With a mixture of bribery and outside assistance, Bearak and British reporter Stephen Bevan managed to weather exposed and insect-ridden living conditions and share their relatively lavish food stores with starving fellow inmates. As the hapless police's case against them crumbled, Bearak and Bevan found themselves free—on $7 bail—and fled the country before further reprisals could follow. (More Zimbabwe stories.)