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A 'Chronicle' of International Relations - Excerpt from Weekly update 2003-15
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe
April 14th - April 20th 2003

Zimbabwe’s impending independence anniversary was not solely responsible for the xenophobic rhetoric that emerged in the government-controlled Press during the week. America’s renewed demands for a transitional government leading to an internationally supervised re-run of the presidential election must also have contributed to exacerbating this fear. The Chronicle (16/4) reported news of this development under the headline ‘United States plots to oust President’, quoting an Australian newspaper report and accessing Information Minister Jonathan Moyo for reaction.

The same day The Daily News carried a wire service story from AFP on the same subject sourced directly from Washington confirming the American demands and its intention to step up the pressure on Zimbabwe’s neighbours. Unforgivably though, the paper inaccurately headlined the story, ‘Zimbabwe’s neighbours ditch Mugabe’, pre-empting events that ironically the Chronicle itself had suggested had happened in its controversial lead story entitled ‘Mbeki U-turn on Zim’, the previous day.

The story, written by the paper’s editor, Stephen Ndlovu, claimed that Mbeki had "revised his so-called ‘quiet diplomacy’ over Zimbabwe" in order to secure support for the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (Nepad) from Britain and the United States. It claimed Mbeki was being described by diplomats in South Africa as "fast becoming a George Bush of Africa", adding that he was "frantically trying to be ‘on the good books’ of former colonial powers and Zimbabwe’s major opponents Britain and the United States by doing what he calls, ‘engaging’ Harare". Unnamed "sources", "activists" and "diplomats" were quoted or reported to have criticized the South African President for "selling out".

The Daily News (18/4) reported that ZANU PF secretary for Information and Publicity, Nathan Shamuyarira and Foreign Affairs Minister Stan Mudenge had dismissed these allegations. And the Chronicle published Shamuyarira’s statement in full on the same day, describing the story as "a motley mixture of wishful thinking, unfounded, ill-founded statements and plain falsehoods". He noted, "Readers of the Chronicle are not told what Mbeki actually said", but "are given a string of statements allegedly made by diplomats and unnamed sources at places that are not identified", adding "editors should report news events fairly and objectively and not resort to concocting comments and views that cannot be substantiated or verified". Mudenge called Ndlovu "misguided", adding that he [Mudenge] was "the one who speaks on Zimbabwe’s foreign policy and not Ndlovu".

While The Sunday Mirror followed up the story of the rift by quoting Moyo disagreeing with his senior colleagues on the grounds that their attack amounted to an attempt to gag the Press from expressing its opinions, The Sunday Mail carried its own lengthy interview with the junior minister defending his editor. But Moyo failed to answer Shamuyarira’s argument that the Chronicle had failed to tell its readers what Mbeki had said and cynically muddled up the idea of the media’s right to freedom of opinion with the discipline of reporting fact.

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