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Local government wrangles
Media Monitoring
Project Zimbabwe
Extract
from Weekly Media Update No. 2003-01
January 6th - January 12th 2003
The public
media's role as government's megaphone was exposed when they unquestioningly
endorsed government's decision to appoint governors for Harare and
Bulawayo and its expansion of a commission appointed last year,
ostensibly to assist Harare City Council develop a turn-around plan
for the capital. Furthermore, the government controlled media continued
to be used as conduits for government's relentless campaign to discredit
Harare's council and particularly its mayor, Elias Mudzuri.
For example,
out of the 17 stories the public press published on the conflict
between the opposition MDC-led Harare city council and local government
minister, Ignatius Chombo, 15 were in support of government while
the remainder were neutral announcements. ZTV carried seven reports
in its
8pm bulletin
on the issue. All reports, which occupied 10% of the total time
allocated to 8pm news during the week, portrayed Mudzuri in a bad
light. 3FM carried nine council-related stories in its main news
bulletins. And like ZTV, all were negative depictions of Mudzuri.
Conversely,
the private Press carried 19 stories on the conflict: 10 reports
accorded Mudzuri a platform to give his side of the story, eight
were neutral and the remainder favoured government.
The public media's
pro-government coverage of the Chombo/Mudzuri wrangle was basically
achieved through simplistic manipulation of popular sentiments (The
Herald (9/1), Demonstration thwarted); propaganda disguised as news
(The Herald
(7/1), Mudzuri admits interfering in tenders); and partisan reports
masquerading as public consensus on government policy (Chronicle,
(9/1),
Governors' appointment hailed).
In fact, while
the bias demonstrated by the public media seemed to stem purely
from its pursuance of government's political agenda, the pro-MDC
standpoint adopted by the private media was seemingly triggered
mostly by its desire to counter distortions carried in the public
media in the first place.
A classic example
was The Herald (7/1) and Daily News' (9/1) coverage of Mudzuri's
alleged "interference" in the Harare City Council's refuse collection
tenders.
Whereas The
Herald (and ZBC-ZTV & 3FM, 6/01, 8pm) seemed hell-bent on criminalizing
Mudzuri's "interference" in the tender process out of context, The
Daily News on the other hand provided the mayor with the platform
to make "his comments in full", which he alleged The Herald had
selectively used.
Indeed, The
Herald story withheld some of the background as to why the mayor
had interfered in the tender. Neither did it adequately avail the
information in the "documents" it said were in its possession.
But The Daily
News established that Mudzuri was compelled to query the city council's
tender specification for refuse collection after discovering that
there was a clause "which virtually excluded new players", and in
the process protected the companies that were given contracts by
the then ZANU PF council led by Solomon Tawengwa in August 1997.
Most of the companies are linked to ZANU PF officials.
And contrary
to the impression created by The Herald report that Mudzuri did
not consult his officers to have the tender clause changed to accommodate
new players, The Daily News established that Josephine Ncube, the
council's Chamber Secretary, its top legal adviser and Joseph Issa,
the council's audit manager, had agreed that there was merit in
Mudzuri's concerns. Still, The Herald (9/1) continued to malign
the mayor whom it accused "of flouting tender procedures (in order)
to give an unfair advantage to some companies".
To lend credence
to its claims, The Daily News (10/1) carried a story in which it
alleged that Highdon, a company owned by Mcdonald Chapfika, brother
to ZANU PF's MP for Mutoko North, had prejudiced the council of
more than $118 million through overcharging.
Highdon is contracted
to supply water chemicals to the city council. However, Mcdonald
denied the allegations.
Equally unprofessional
was the manner in which The Herald (9/1) misrepresented facts pertaining
to a foiled demonstration by MDC activists protesting against Chombo's
alleged interference in the affairs of the council.
The paper untruthfully
attributed the failure of the protest to poor attendance, while
in reality, the demonstration failed to take off because it was
quashed by the police, SW Radio Africa (8/01), The Daily News, Financial
Gazette and Daily Mirror (9/1).
In fact, the
assertion by the paper also contradicted the substance of its headline,
Demonstration thwarted.
Significant
too, was the public media's unquestioning acceptance of government's
announcement that it would appoint governors for Harare and Bulawayo
to coordinate development in the cities, The Herald and Chronicle
(6/1).
ZBC (ZTV, 7/01
& Radio Zimbabwe, 8pm) legitimized the move by quoting Chombo
as saying: "This is actually a correction of an anomaly where a
province as big as Harare, and Bulawayo . is not represented by
a governor, yet smaller provinces like Matabeleland North, Matabeleland
South, Mashonaland Central . have a governor representing them.
. So it was a disservice to those two metropolitan cities not to
have governors and district administrators".
While Chombo
was quoted, in the same bulletins, as having said, "the appointment
of governors should not be viewed as a ploy to monitor the activities
of the MDC executive mayors", his subsequent statement (on ZTV)
exposed government's machinations.
He stated: "It
is not a political gimmick. It cannot be a political gimmick to
improve the service provision in this town or in Bulawayo. .We want
residents in those said provinces to receive services that they
are paying for. We want government through that system to provide
whatever it is (sic) intends to provide."
However, his
statement, which actually confirmed that the governors are set to
encroach into areas of municipal jurisdiction such as providing
services to residents, escaped ZBC's analytical capacity.
The public broadcaster
actually attempted to use Mudzuri to endorse the move. Alleging
that he had "refused to speak in front of cameras", ZTV quoted Mudzuri
as having said: "The appointment of a governor for Harare Province
would not in any way affect the operations of the city council which
he said is not bound by any law to obey orders from governors" adding
"Mudzuri's statements are contrary to speculation that the city
council is against the appointment of governors".
ZBC also nonchalantly
reported further attempts by government to clip the powers of the
MDC-led municipalities by expanding the committee it appointed to
ostensibly assist in the administration of Harare, (ZTV & 3FM,
8/01, 8pm) and its appointment of a three-member committee to "bring
sanity" into Chegutu municipality (11/01, 8pm).
So passive and
partisan was the public media that their reports on this government
interference in the running of MDC-led councils hinged heavily either
on government or ruling ZANU PF officials. They also failed to come
up with a clear analysis of how duties and responsibilities would
be distributed between the elected mayors, councilors and government-appointed
governors and committees without duplication.
By contrast,
the private media challenged Chombo's sincerity in proposing the
appointments considering his uneasy working relationship with Mudzuri.
Its sourcing too was more diverse. It ranged from government officials,
social commentators, to ordinary citizens.
Besides, the
private media interpreted the move as government's covert plan to
neutralize the MDC's influence in Zimbabwe's biggest cities, The
Daily Mirror and Zimbabwe Independent of the same day (10/1).
The Daily Mirror
quoted Harare residents as querying Chombo's sudden interest in
council business, while The Zimbabwe Independent noted in its editorial
that "the so-called anomaly about Harare and Bulawayo going without
governors for 22 years is ZANU PF's attempt to vitiate the powers
of executive mayors and impose its own pernicious policies on residents
of MDC controlled cities."
Notwithstanding
this, both the public and private media were unable to fully explore
the burden the appointments were likely to inflict on the fiscus,
what the would-be governors briefs would be and whether those areas
run by both governors and mayors were indeed better "coordinated"
than Harare and Bulawayo.
Meanwhile, the
polarity between the private and the public media in covering the
Harare council issues was further exposed in their reports of the
arrest of Mudzuri in Mabvuku for allegedly "addressing an illegal
meeting". While ZBC (11/1, 8pm) and The Sunday Mail (12/1) presented
the arrest as normal execution of the rule of law, The Standard
(12/1) interpreted the arrest as signaling "the country's slide
into a police state". The paper reported that Mudzuri and 21 other
people including councilors, were arrested when they were explaining
to residents "the truth surrounding the crippling water crisis",
a position dismissed by The Sunday Mail. The paper quoted police
Superintendent Brighton Mudzamiri as having said "the gathering
was a group of youths that police strongly suspect to be MDC supporters".
Previous
reports can be accessed at http://www.mmpz.org.zw
Visit the MMPZ
fact sheet
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