In 1999, Nyarota founded the
Daily News, an independent daily newspaper. The paper stated that it would be neither "pro-government" nor "anti-government", but would "be a medium for vibrant discourse among the divergent political, social, religious and other groups of Zimbabwe", as well as fight for
press freedom and
freedom of speech. Its first issue appeared on 21 March 1999. The newspaper's motto was "Telling it like it is". On 1 August 2000, the
News reported that Zimbabwe's secret police, the
Central Intelligence Organisation, had sent a man named Bernard Masara to kill Nyarota; however, after meeting Nyarota in a lift, Masara changed his mind and warned him of the plot. Masara then called his employer with the paper's editors listening so that they could verify the source of the plan. On 22 April 2000, a bomb was thrown into the paper's offices, but no one was hurt. South African
Associated Press photographer Obed Zilwa was arrested for the attack, but the newspaper alleged that agents of Mugabe's security forces had thrown the bomb. In January 2001, the
News building was bombed again, this time destroying its printing presses. According to the
Committee to Protect Journalists, "credible sources" linked the Zimbabwean military to the attack. On 30 December 2002, Nyarota resigned as editor of the
Daily News, to avoid his firing by the paper's new executive chair. The paper was shut down by the government in September 2003. == Later career ==