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Analysis of coverage of women politicians by the print media in Zimbabwe
Women in Politics Support Unit (WiPSU)
January 2003

General Overview of Coverage
Below is a statistical analysis of the coverage:

  • A total of 20 articles were published in the 4 months
  • 17 articles covered Members of Parliament including the Ministers/ Deputy Minster and the Governor
  • 3 articles covered women Councilors
  • 9 out of the 16 Members of Parliament were covered
  • 3 out of the 46 urban women councilors were covered

The women parliamentarians can be divided into four broad categories, i.e. Ministers and Deputy Minister, the Governor, the Deputy Speaker of Parliament and Members of Parliament who do not hold another post. The statistical information on the coverage in relation to these broad categories is as follows:

  • 1 of the 17 articles referred to the Deputy Speaker
  • 7 of the 17 articles referred to women Ministers and the Deputy Minister in their official capacity
  • 6 of the articles referred to the Governor
  • 4 of the 17 articles referred to Members of Parliament who do not hold another portfolio
  • 2 of the 3 articles on women councilors covered the Deputy Mayors of Harare and Bulawayo respectively.

The statistical information above leads to a number of conclusions. The Governor of Manicaland, Oppah Muchinguri, is the most newsworthy woman politician. She is the only woman Governor in Zimbabwe. 33% of all the articles published involved her. 5 of the articles were on issues she dealt with in her capacity as the Manicaland Governor. The second most newsworthy group are the women Ministers and the Deputy Minister. Again, the articles were of the women in their official capacity. However, the coverage of women Ministers is quite low considering that Zimbabwe has 4 Ministers and 1 Deputy Minister. There was an article on at least each of them but the most covered woman Minister is Flora Bhuka, the Minister of State for the Land Reform Programme who is also the Chairperson of the Parliamentary Women’s Caucus. This is probably due to the fact that the land reform process is a top government agenda and therefore a topical issue in the political, social and economic sectors. The media does not appear to regard women Councilors as newsworthy because only 3 articles referred to them.

One positive issue was the use of photographs by the newspapers. Of the 21 reports, 19 of them had photographs of the women concerned. A photograph in a newspaper makes an article more eye-catching and appealing to the reader. It also gives a face and profile of the person concerned.

The reports’ focus was wide and varied. The women were covered in relation to their official duties, (this relates more to the Ministers and the Governor), in relation to their constituency work, in Parliamentary Debates, in their personal lives, and in relation to their political parties. One report focused on a ‘clash’ between two of the women politicians.

Not all the newspapers cited above published reports on the women politicians. The breakdown of the reports according to the papers is:

  • The Daily News, published 11 out of 20, i.e. 55%
  • The Daily Mirror published 7 out of 20, i.e. 35%
  • The Herald published 1 out of 20, i.e. 5%
  • The Weekend Tribune Published 1 out of 20, i.e. 5%
There is a great challenge for the papers to report more on women and for those who have not to question their own internal policies and their views on women and their political participation. Even for the Daily News the figures are not impressive because it means they published an average of only 3 articles on women in politics and decision making a month. Women’s issues are a long way to go before they are realized to be of national importance.

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