THE NGO NETWORK ALLIANCE PROJECT - an online community for Zimbabwean activists  
 View archive by sector
 
 
    HOME THE PROJECT DIRECTORYJOINARCHIVESEARCH E:ACTIVISMBLOGSMSFREEDOM FONELINKS CONTACT US
 

 


Back to Index

Media Update January 7th - 13th, 2002
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe
January 18, 2002


Contents
1. Countdown to the presidential elections
2. Armed forces statement
3. Political violence - poor sourcing messes up coverage
4. State media smear campaign


1. Countdown to the presidential election   
TOP

In the week that the dates of the presidential election were announced, statistical evidence gathered by MMPZ serves to consign the government controlled media to the dustbin of partisan propaganda. During the week Zimpapers and ZBC featured unrelenting promotional stories about the ruling party's political campaign and unsupported accusations that the opposition MDC was linked to anthrax-mail terror tactics and the biggest robbery in South African history. And their reports on the threat of interference by the armed forces in the democratic process escaped any sensible analysis, especially with regard to its unconstitutionality. Nor did the state media provide its audiences with any useful information about the introduction of repressive new legislation

Instead, the national public broadcaster and Zimpapers worked closely to suffocate the MDC campaign and reinforce the ruling party's continued portrayal of the opposition as a violent, unpatriotic terrorist organization, and then used this figment of their disinformation department to justify the introduction of tyrannical security laws.

In the week ZBC1 news bulletins carried 23 political campaign stories, 22 (96%) of them pro-ZANU PF with just one that could be described as neutral. Radio 3FM followed a similar pattern, reporting 27 campaign stories, 25 (93%) of them in favour of the ruling party. The other two campaign stories featured Zanu Ndonga. Neither ZBC1 nor radio carried a single story of the MDC's presidential campaign, thus perpetuating ZBC's appalling reputation established during the constitutional referendum and the parliamentary elections in the year 2000 as being a shameless propaganda outlet for the ruling party. Once again, ZBC's public service mandate to provide fair and accurate coverage of all mainstream political opinion is being grossly abused.

In addition, ZBC1 (television) has refined a tactic that it only made limited use of during the parliamentary election. During the week, ZBC1's campaign stories carried a total of 59 voices, 11 (18.6%) of which were ruling party officials; five others were from the Registrar-General's office or professional commentators inclined towards favouring the ruling party. The remaining 42 voices (71%) were of ordinary Zimbabweans, but in every case they made their political affiliation to ZANU PF clear, even going so far as to name President Mugabe as their candidate of choice. Such figures unmistakably expose the grossly biased selectivity practiced by the national broadcaster in sourcing the voice of the Zimbabwean public. MMPZ condemns such crude and blatant prejudice.


2. Armed forces statement: 3FM fails to cover statement    
TOP
On Wednesday (9/1) General Vitalis Zvinavashe, commander of the armed forces, issued a statement on behalf of all Zimbabwe's security services that implied they would not accept the result of the presidential election if the MDC leader, Morgan Tsvangirai won. ZBC1 broke the story in its main bulletin that evening, carrying footage of Zvinavashe, flanked by all the service chiefs and the head of the CIO, saying that the country's security organizations would only support political leaders who "pursue Zimbabwean values, traditions (and) beliefs for which thousands of lives were lost in pursuit of Zimbabwe's hard-won independence, sovereignty, territorial integrity and national interest. To this end, let it be known that the highest office on (sic) the land is a 'straightjacket' whose occupant is expected to observe the objectives of the liberation struggle.

"We will, therefore, not accept, let alone support or salute anyone with a different agenda that threatens (the) very existence of our sovereignty, our country and our people".

Surprisingly, Radio 3FM didn't cover the story until its 7am bulletin the next morning when all the print media reported the story. The Herald and The Chronicle (10/1) also pointed out that the service chiefs' stance comes as a big blow to the MDC, which is known to be bankrolled by the country's colonial master, Britain, and commercial farmers."

The Herald (11/1) added the bizarre assertion that the armed forces had been pressured into making the statement by the British government, which, according to the report, had planted stories in the local privately owned Press "alleging the top brass had urged President Mugabe to quit and appoint a successor".

This appeared to be a follow-up to a statement carried by ZBC1 (8pm) the previous evening by Home Affairs Minister, John Nkomo, who welcomed the security forces' statement as "long overdue" because the private Press had been "demonizing" the security forces and putting them into disrepute "in the hope that as they did that, that would put ZANU PF and its government in bad light".

In the same bulletin, Youth Minister, Elliot Manyika, also defended the security forces' threat by saying they "were just spelling out the values of our nation. This is what any right-thinking Zimbabwean should know."
ZBC failed to ask either of them whether Zvinavashe's comments constituted an unacceptably dangerous interference by the military in the civilian affairs of a democracy, or even whether the comments amounted to the threat of a military dictatorship.

But Friday's editions of the privately owned papers (The Daily News and The Zimbabwe Independent 11/1) carried a storm of protest from the MDC and domestic organizations representing a broad cross section of civic society condemning the statement as "dangerous", "unconstitutional", "treasonous" and a clear attempt to intimidate the electorate by indirectly threatening a military take-over should the MDC leader win the election.Both papers' editorials reflected these sentiments, and The Daily News the next day reported South Africa's presidential spokesman as describing the statement as "..not acceptable. You can't have a situation where the security forces are trying to pre-empt an election."

The Herald edition of the same day carried a confused editorial attempting to distance Zvinavashe's statement from the MDC's candidate despite its earlier efforts to bind them together when it stated that "..at no point did the generals disqualify anyone, let alone name Mr. Tsvangirai, or even suggest that only candidates with liberation struggle credentials would be recognized by the military and security forces".

And although it challenged Tsvangirai to reconfirm his patriotism, it also labeled him a "traitor" to the country.

The next day The Sunday Mail's editorial echoed The Herald's thoughts when it stressed the point that the service chiefs did not name Tsvangirai, but that any reaction from the MDC proved that "..the guilty are always afraid".

Neither paper made the connection that they have vigorously defended government's persistent efforts over the past 24 months to portray Tsvangirai and the MDC as exactly the sort of candidate that Zvinavashe's statement alludes to.

The Zimbabwe Standard (13/1) added a new dimension to the story when it reported a number of middle ranking military officers warning the armed forces chiefs that they would find themselves isolated if they attempted to stage a coup.


3. Political violence: Poor sourcing messes up coverage   
TOP

All the media continued to report an upsurge in the incidence of political violence that has plagued the country since President Mugabe urged ZANU PF supporters to wage a real war against the MDC at the party's Congress in mid-December.

But the media are sharply divided over who is responsible. The privately-owned Press have only reported attacks on villagers, urban dwellers and MDC supporters, while the government-controlled media have carried stories almost exclusively of MDC supporters' attacks on ruling party supporters.

In the state media's on-going efforts to portray MDC as a violent organization, ZBC1 has adopted a 'Violence Update' in its main evening bulletins and relies heavily on police reports and unattributed sources for its stories.

During the week it carried 25 reports of political violence, 20 (80%) of them accusing the MDC of being responsible, while three (12%) were attributed to the ruling party and two to unknown assailants who had attacked MDC supporters. But ZBC1 reported that those incidents sparked by ZANU PF supporters were only committed in retaliation for violence initiated by MDC supporters.

In its section on political violence, which has now been dubbed, "Campaign for Peace Update", television carried 13 stories on political violence without any attribution beyond the broadcaster's claims. The 12 other stories originated from police information and carried the voice of ZANU PF officials and sympathizers 17 times. Not once was the MDC accessed for comment.

Radio 3FM 's 12 stories on political violence followed a similar pattern.

ZBC and Zimpapers' reports of violence regularly conflict with reports of the same incidents in the privately owned Press over who is responsible for initiating the incidents. The state media consistently fail to address persistent reports in the privately owned Press of widespread violence against communities around the country committed by ZANU PF militias and even the military. But the denials by government authorities and the claim by the Ministers of Home Affairs and Information that the MDC is manufacturing National Service uniforms and giving them to its supporters to disguise the perpetrators of violence without providing a shred of evidence for this, is stretching credibility to the extreme. It should be noted that the privately owned Press also rarely follow up reports of violence reported in the state media.

TV has also resorted to flighting what amounts to ZANU PF advertisements in the advertising sections of its 8pm bulletins by airing clips of President Mugabe, Elliot Manyika and Police Commissioner Augustine Chihuri, calling for an end to political violence and a peaceful election. Nowhere does the MDC get a chance to do the same, and carried in the context of the station's reports of violence blaming the MDC, the images serve as a powerful portrayal of a peaceful ZANU PF fighting a violent challenger. Hard evidence in the privately owned Press of murdered and beaten MDC supporters and terrorized urban and rural communities, proves this to be a gross distortion of the truth and demonstrates the extent to which ZBC's news broadcasts have been so thoroughly corrupted.

On Tuesday (8/1) ZBC reinforced this distortion by airing in its 8pm news bulletins (TV and 3FM) selective incidents of violence from last year, all of which the state has accused the MDC of committing but for which there have still been no convictions. There was no new angle to any of the reviewed stories, and TV gratuitously re-ran footage of the discovery and exhumation of the bodies of Cain Nkala and Limukani Luphahla who were murdered in Matabeleland last year.
The bulletins described their deaths as being the result of a "clear and deep-seated terrorism which has become fully blown." and then used this to justify the government's plan to introduce the Public Order and Security Bill to "deal with political violence".

Nowhere has the national broadcaster provided details of this Draconian law, which invests so much power in the police that it even indemnifies them against the killing of civilians in certain circumstances. It also gives them total discretion over who can and who may not hold public gatherings and political rallies. But ZBC has not asked government officials or the police how these provisions will help reduce political violence.

The Daily News carried 12 stories on political violence during the week, but was unable to obtain a comment from the police for any of them, although it reported trying to. As a result, the paper was obliged to rely on reports from the victims, usually MDC supporters. None of its stories however, accessed comment from ZANU PF whose supporters, the paper claimed, were to blame for most of the violence it reported. It is important for the paper to be seen attempting to obtain comment from all parties alleged to be involved in the violence for the sake of its credibility. MMPZ condemns the refusal by the police to co-operate with The Daily News.

By comparison, The Herald carried six stories on political violence - all of which blamed the MDC - and accessed police comment five times.

In its story on violence in Mbare, The Herald (8/1) reported that both MDC and ZANU PF supporters had been arrested, which was corroborated by the police. But in its follow-up of their court appearance (11/1), The Herald simply reported that, "six members of the MDC youth wing accused of unleashing violence in Mbare have been placed on remand by a Harare magistrates' court."

There was no mention of the ruling party supporters arrested. Readers were left to puzzle over the mystery with the inference being that either the paper overlooked their appearance in court, or that the police had released them.
The same edition of The Herald reported the murder of a senior Zaka-based ZANU PF official, Gibson Masarira, and blamed it squarely on MDC youths. Although it quoted the police as saying his death was "a clear case of political violence", the police were not quoted actually naming the MDC.

The Herald however, simply stated that, "This brings to two the number of ruling party supporters who have been murdered by the opposition party this week."

The paper then reminded its readers that their deaths came "in the wake of similar terrorist murders" of Nkala and Lupaphla in Matabeleland "as the MDC steps up its terror campaign to win the election." in March.
By using the passive past tense, the story avoided quoting anybody when it reported that "Suspected MDC terrorists are said" to have attacked Masarira his family and other villagers in broad daylight.

So the story actually carried no tangible evidence that the MDC was responsible for the murder. Nor did the paper identify the murder of the other ZANU PF supporter, which it had ascribed to the MDC.

Earlier in the week, The Daily News (7/1) reported that an MDC official's home in Zaka had been looted in an "orgy of terror" by war veterans and ZANU PF militias. But it too, provided no corroborating evidence for these claims, although it accessed comment from a provincial MDC official.

The paper also appeared to get its news priorities in a muddle by tacking on a report about the murder of a bus conductor in Gokwe by "ZANU PF militia" to the end of its story about violence in Zaka. And although the report said the man had died in hospital, it only quoted "witnesses" describing the incident.

MMPZ condemns the blatantly unsubstantiated claims of both papers in these cases.


4. State media smear campaign: An assault on readers' intelligence   
TOP

At the beginning of the week, The Herald (7/1) used its front-page headline, 'MDC linked to $2bn SA heist', to discredit the opposition party without providing a shred of evidence to support this claim. It picked up a story from the South African Sunday Times reporting that Zimbabweans had been involved in the robbery at Jan Smuts airport and then simply stated that "sources" in Johannesburg said they "could be MDC members living in that country".

Later in the story The Herald deepened this fiction by stating that, "Police sources in Harare said the MDC had politicized criminal elements and fugitives in South Africa.", and marked the point where the story descended into undisguised propaganda discrediting the MDC.

Notably, ZBC (13/1 - 7am and 8pm respectively) carried a follow-up story simply reporting that four of the 13 robbery suspects arrested had been picked up in Bulawayo and deported to South Africa. There was no suggestion of any political connotation in the report.

In another carefully coordinated assault on the credentials of the MDC by the state-controlled media, the MDC was blamed for launching germ warfare in its "terror campaign" to win the presidential election.
Under the headline, 'Anthrax scare', The Herald (8/1) broke the story that "a suspected anthrax attack had been detected at Causeway Post Office."

According to "authoritative sources" The Herald said "alarm bells were raised after powder (in two suspicious-looking envelopes) was discovered and the letter (sic) had all the signs of an anthrax attack". But it provided no information about what these signs were. That evening, TV (8pm) followed up the story by announcing that Zimbabwe had "become the latest victim of the current bio-terrorism attack," and carried footage of the closure of the Post Office and the search by Ministry of Health officials wearing germ protection clothing. Like The Herald it reported that one of the envelopes had been addressed to a senior government official and unlike The Herald, referred to the anthrax-mail attacks in the United States of America last year.

This clearly gave the impression that Zimbabwe was under siege from as yet unidentified enemies of the state and provided ZBC's Reuben Barwe with the opportunity to remind his audiences that Rhodesian security forces had, with the collusion of their South African colleagues, had used anthrax to infect black people during the liberation war.
True to form, the next morning The Herald (9/1) announced that the MDC was linked to the anthrax mail and that ex-Rhodesians were involved under the banner headline, 'MDC terror mounts'.

But its only evidence for these claims was a statement from the Minister of Home Affairs John Nkomo. According to The Herald, ".Nkomo said in an interview. that the suspected anthrax attacks were part of terrorist activities perpetrated by the MDC and its white founders who were bitter about the land reform programme."
And his evidence for claiming this? "It is obvious that former Rhodesians are involved in these dastardly acts as they have done so before," the paper quoted the Minister as saying.

The paper reported that laboratory tests on the offending envelopes had confirmed the presence of bacteria, which had yet to be identified.

So if specialists still had to identify the bacteria, where did Zimpapers and ZBC get the idea that the envelopes contained anthrax?

The authenticity of this story collapses at this point and is exposed as a creation of those in control of the government media as a ploy to further discredit the opposition. MMPZ condemns in the strongest terms this deliberate, cynical and crude abuse of the state media.

But despite discrediting itself as a tool of the ruling party, The Herald (10/1) continued to destroy any shred of credibility with another story on the topic headlined, 'Anthrax mail targeted at (Information Minister) Moyo', and bearing the sub-head, 'Incident a terrorist act, say police'. Only at the end of the story do we learn from a government doctor that, "Laboratory tests conducted on the powder have tested negative for anthrax bacteria."

This should have been the basis for the story, but instead, The Herald continued with the fiction by misleading its readers and persisting with their original lies of anthrax bio-terrorism perpetrated by the MDC.

ZBC had difficulty following The Herald's lead, but used the paper's stories to perpetuate this giant hoax. It can only be imagined that this manipulation of the state media provides some entertainment value for their audiences who must otherwise believe such reports are an offence to their intelligence.

The MEDIA UPDATE is produced and circulated by the Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe, 15 Duthie Avenue, Alexandra Park, Harare, Tel/fax: 263 4 703702, E-mail:
monitors@mweb.co.zw or advocacy@media-monitors.icon.co.zw
Send all queries and comments to the Project Coordinator. Also, please feel free to circulate this report. Previous copies of MMPZ reports can be accessed at
http://www.icon.co.zw/mmpz


Visit the MMPZ fact sheet

Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.

TOP