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By-elections - Excerpt from Weekly update 2003-12
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe
March 24th - April 1st 2003

The Highfield and Kuwadzana by-elections dominated media space during the week under review. While the public and private media agreed that violence was a cause for major concern in the electoral process, they differed on who the perpetrators were. The public media accused the MDC of fanning violence and used isolated incidents that broke out during the previous week’s stay-away as examples.

Conversely, the private Press observed that violence against ordinary civilians and those perceived to be opposition party supporters by ZANU PF activists and security agents would render the elections not free or fair. Unlike the public media, they also noted that the combination of violence, vote-buying and the manipulation of the voters’ roll by the Registrar-General, Tobaiwa Mudede, would tilt the scales in favour of the ruling party. For example, The Daily News (28/3) reported that the MDC had discovered that about 19,000 "ghost" voters who did not live in the two constituencies had been added to the voters’ roll. The party’s director of elections, Remus Makuwaza, was quoted as saying his party suspected these anomalies to be the main reason why Mudede had delayed providing the opposition with copies of the roll. In fact, Mudede only released the voters’ roll after the High Court had ordered him to do so.

ZTV (28/03, 8pm) tried to dismiss these claims by presenting the RG’s office as transparent in its conduct. It quoted Mudede as having said interested members of the public could buy copies of the voters’ roll provided they complied with conditions set by his office. However, these conditions were not stated. Neither was Mudede challenged to explain the alleged irregular inclusion of an extra 19,000 names, a fact also reported by The Daily Mirror (24/3) and (28/03).

Suspicions that Mudede would use the roll to rig the two elections was also aired in The Zimbabwe Independent’s comment (28/03), which observed that ZANU PF was "incapable of winning an election without the help of the Registrar-General’s office". The Weekend Tribune (29/03) weighed in with a call for impartiality in the RG’s office. It stated: " … it is important that the Registrar-General’s office that is running the elections be fully prepared and be fair to all contesting parties. We do not want a sham of an election, one that is skewed in favour of one political party." In its front-page article, the paper reported that the MDC had even contemplated withdrawing from the elections because of fears that the RG would facilitate a ZANU PF victory. Indeed, these fears saw the MDC threatening mass protests if the elections were rigged, The Daily News (24/03) and The Financial Gazette (27/03). The Daily Mirror (24/03) also carried the MDC’s threats, but deliberately distorted the remarks made by one of its MPs, Tendai Biti. He said his party would "go onto the streets" if the elections were rigged, a statement The Daily Mirror interpreted to mean MDC promises more violence, according to the article’s headline. The story also sought to present the violence that broke out during the two-day strike as having been sanctioned by the party.

In fact, the public media continued to milk the stay-away violence and the MDC’s threat to protest to bolster the notion that it was a violent party. For example, ZTV (28/03, 8pm) quoted Home Affairs Minister Kembo Mohadi saying the MDC was "bussing people from outside Harare to come and cause havoc. The train last night brought in people from Bulawayo and picked up another group of people from Gweru just to come and cause some mayhem." Without providing any evidence, Mohadi added: "We are very much aware that whether MDC wins these by-elections or loses they are still going to cause violence". The Herald (29/3) also unquestioningly quoted Mohadi making similar remarks. It was not surprising the public media allowed Mohadi’s claims to pass without scrutiny because they suited the media’s stance to sell the MDC to the electorate as a violent party. In the same ZTV bulletin, President Mugabe was quoted employing grossly inflammatory rhetoric when he accused the MDC of fanning violence, describing it as a "terrorist party" that "murders wives and kills women", adding, "it should thus be confined to the electoral scrap heap and I hope this happens tomorrow and Sunday" His remarks were also carried the in public Press the following day (29/3).

While the public media remained silent on ZANU PF candidates’ vote-buying tactics through the use of scarce basic commodities, the private Press diligently exposed this chicanery. For example, The Weekend Tribune, Basic foods galore in Highfield, reported ZANU PF candidates had brought scarce commodities to the two constituencies to lure voters. The paper interviewed two political commentators, Heneri Dzinotyiwei and John Makumbe who both agreed that food would not yield support for ZANU PF.

Although the private Press was tenacious in exposing ZANU PF’s irregular efforts to engineer election conditions that would favour its candidate, it failed to fully explore the issue of polling stations and their location. It was only on voting day that The Daily News (29/03) revealed that polling stations had been increased in both constituencies. The paper quoted MDC candidate for Kuwadzana Nelson Chamisa as saying, "The number of polling stations has been increased to facilitate the traffic of their (Zanu PF’s) ghost voters. The intention is dubious." However, Chamisa did not clearly explain how the increase would facilitate rigging. The Herald (28/3) merely announced that a total of 19 polling stations had been established for both constituencies without even notifying its readers that this was an increase of six from the previous 13 that were used during the presidential election. Similarly, ZBC, (ZTV, 28/03, 8pm & Radio Zimbabwe, 29/03, 1pm) reported the issue as a mere announcement.

Besides the Zimbabwe Election Support Network (ZESN)’s supplement in The Daily News (26/3), no other media carried adequate information on voter education. Also, no media fully investigated the boundaries of the two constituencies particularly Kuwadzana, following speculation that settlers at White Cliff farm, which is outside Kuwadzana, would vote.

Meanwhile, the extremes of perspective between the private and the public Press were again highlighted in their coverage of the election days. While The Sunday News & The Sunday Mail (30/03) and The Herald (31/3) reported that the polls were conducted "without incident" and "ended peacefully", The Standard (30/3) and The Daily News (31/03) observed otherwise. The Standard reported that ZANU PF youths "ran amok trying to intimidate voters and to influence the poll result". It also alleged that the police "watched helplessly" as ZANU PF supporters held gatherings near polling stations where "voters were being invited … to register for scarce food commodities such as mealie-meal which could be seen piled up nearby". The Daily News (31/03) and (1/04) corroborated The Standard’s report.

There were also conflicting reports on voter turn-out. While The Sunday Mail reported, Huge voter turn out in Highfield, Kuwadzana by-elections, The Sunday Mirror led with, Low turn-out mars decisive by-elections. Notably, both papers based their reports on the same statistics of the number of people who had voted by 7pm on Saturday, figures which represented a mediocre response at best.

ZTV (29/3) also confused its audiences on the turn-out on the first day of the election. While its 6pm bulletin reported that voting in Kuwadzana began at a "slow pace", it later reported, in its 8pm bulletin, that, "when polling started at 7 o’clock in the morning in Kuwadzana, there was a large turnout of voters, the biggest queue of 350 voters was reported at Kuwadzana district office."

When it emerged that the MDC had won the elections, the public media downplayed the newsworthiness of the opposition’s victory. For example, ZTV (31/03) carried the results as item five out of 11 news pieces in its 6pm bulletins. And in its 8pm bulletin, the station led with a review of a previous day’s soccer match between Zimbabwe and soccer minnows Seychelles. The story was accorded about 10 minutes. It was only after the soccer story and a short break, that ZTV then announced the results in a two-minute report. The trend was not different in the public Press. The Herald (01/03) and Chronicle (01/03) reported that results showed that ZANU PF "was consistent by maintaining its support base while that of MDC fluctuated". While The Herald led with the story, the Chronicle placed it on page two preferring to lead with an unsubstantiated article, MDC’s security agents revolt. The papers also quoted Chinotimba as saying, "Zanu PF supporters were on Sunday threatened by Glen View MDC MP Paul Madzore who moved around polling stations wielding a pistol." Notably, it was the same papers that reported the elections were peaceful.

In announcing the results, The Daily News (1/4) reported that the MDC had managed to retain the two Harare seats "despite massive intimidation by pro-Zanu PF militias in the run-up to the polls." According to the report, both Chinotimba and the winning MDC candidate Mungofa acknowledged that the elections had not been free and fair.

The Daily Mirror (01/03) comment expressed surprise that MDC candidates accepted the results "despite the fact that the MDC had made claims to the international world that the elections had been rigged before they were held", adding that "Zanu PF candidates, Joseph Chinotimba and David Mutasa must be commended for accepting by-election results." Surprisingly however, its lead story contradicted this position, reporting that Chinotimba had refused to accept the results and had "briefly addressed his supporters outside Cecil (sic) Jennings Hall who in turn let volleys of stones at the celebrating MDC supporters …"

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