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The battle of the towns
Media Monitoring
Project Zimbabwe
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2003-34
Monday 25th - Sunday 31st August, 2003
The coverage
of the urban council elections as well as the Harare Central and
Makonde parliamentary by-elections scheduled for August 30 and 31
assumed greater prominence this week as the election dates drew
closer. For example, the Press carried 34 articles on the elections.
Fifteen of the stories were in the government controlled Press while
19 appeared in the private papers. 3FM carried 12 reports, Radio
Zimbabwe 19 and Studio 7 23.
As in previous elections however, the government-controlled media
continued to expose themselves as willing campaign tools for the
ruling party. They largely carried pro-ZANU PF activities while
ignoring those of the MDC. For example, ZTV devoted 19 minutes or
50 percent of the total time it allocated to the elections in its
8pm bulletins (excluding sports, business and weather) to ZANU PF
campaign activities. The remainder were on the progress of voting
during the two-day polling. The MDC was not covered.
Radio Zimbabwe also campaigned for ZANU PF in nine stories or 47
percent of the 19 reports it carried. The rest were updates on the
voting days. This was also the case with 3FM, which carried seven
(58 percent) pro-ZANU PF stories out of 12 election reports.
Similarly, of
the 21 stories on campaign activities the government-controlled
Press reported, 18 were pro-ZANU PF, two were negative portrayals
of the MDC and one was about the National Alliance for Good Governance
(NAGG).
This blatant
partisanship even saw ZTV and the Chronicle shamelessly campaigning
for ZANU PF’s candidate for Harare Central, William Nhara, who they
presented as an "analyst" – and not an interested
party – when seeking his comments on topical issues during the week.
Against this
background ZESN chairman Reginald Matchaba-Hove was quoted on Studio
7 (26/8) correctly observing that "Government had disregarded
the SADC protocol on elections…which states that opposition parties
shall be given equal opportunity…and time and space in the state
media…"
The private media were more professional, giving more balanced
coverage to the main contestants. For example, of the 13 campaign
related activities carried in the private Press seven were on ZANU
PF, while six were on the activities of the MDC. Studio 7 adopted
a similar trend. Out of the 23 election stories the station carried,
10 or 43 percent covered both the MDC and ZANU PF candidates. The
rest were largely updates on voting days.
The private media also highlighted flaws in the electoral process,
such as irregularities in the voters’ roll and alleged vote-buying
through the abuse of food aid by ZANU PF. The private Press, for
example, carried six reports on such issues. However, the papers
and Studio 7, waited for the MDC to raise these concerns for them.
For instance, The Daily News (26/8) quoted the MDC claiming
that "nearly 20 000" people had been improperly
registered as voters nationwide, whilst 1 700 people who voted in
the 2000 parliamentary elections were missing from Harare Central
voters’ roll alone. Names of those who were reportedly missing included
the former MP for the constituency Mike Auret, Ward 6 councillor
Dale Dore, Ward 7 councillor Michael Laban and Susan Tsvangirai,
the wife of the MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai. MDC Director of Elections,
Remus Makuwaza, was quoted alleging that the Registrar-General’s
office had removed some names from the roll because it wanted to
replace "genuine voters with ghost voters."
Although the Electoral Supervisory Commission (ESC) was quoted
denying receiving such reports, Makuwaza insisted that his party
had communicated the irregularities to the electoral body. Studio
7 (28/8) also carried a similar report and quoted the MDC candidate
for Harare Central Zwizwai Murisi describing the roll as "…shambolic
and fraudulent".
The two did
not carry independent investigations to verify this.
The Herald (27/8), on the other hand, seemed bent on stifling
such allegations. Its report on the matter, which was the only story
carried by the government-controlled media on the matter, merely
quoted Murisi - in passing- as having "alleged that about
1 704 white voters has been removed from the roll".
No effort was made to verify these claims with the RG’s office.
The Daily
News (30/8) also reported that the RG’s office denied both independent
and opposition candidates access to the voters’ roll. The paper
quoted opposition and independent candidates for Mutare, Kariba,
Kadoma and Victoria Falls complaining that they had yet to receive
copies of the roll a day before the elections.
Earlier, the
paper (27/8) and The Zimbabwe Independent (29/8) revealed
that apart from allegedly manipulating the roll in its favour, the
ZANU PF government was also using public funds and food to buy off
voters. The Daily News reported that Social Welfare Minister
July Moyo had directed Masvingo City Council to disburse $60 million
immediately for the food-for-work programme, to "villagers"
before they had done any work, while The Zimbabwe Independent
(29/8) reported that ZANU PF councillors in Bulawayo had "reduced
the price of maize in a vote buying bid".
Perhaps the worst allegation of political manipulation, bordering
on blackmail, was provided by Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa,
who was quoted in The Daily News (27/8) threatening Manicaland
province that it would remain underdeveloped as it "lacks
patriotism" because "since independence…
all the opposition parties had their leaders from Manicaland…
We had Ndabaningi Sithole, Muzorewa, Dongo, Tekere, and now
we have Tsvangirai, all from Manicaland province. And these people
have been known to be leading actors against the government."
The public media
turned a blind eye to this vindictive side of ZANU PF and concentrated
on promoting the ruling party’s candidates while discrediting those
of the MDC. For example, The Herald (28/8), Zanu PF scents
victory in Kariba polls, glowingly reported the ruling
party’s preparations for the town’s mayoral elections, largely quoting
ZANU PF’s Kariba election campaign coordinator, Younus Patel. Said
the paper: "Veteran educationist and former district
education officer for Kariba Cde Petros Tofile Maya will stand against
opposition (MDC)’s little-known Mr John Houghten (sic). Not much
is known about Mr Houghten except that he is a white man living
in the district." Notably, Patel’s ethnicity was conveniently
concealed.
ZTV (26/8) copied
this racist approach in its campaign against Houghton. It reported:
"In this election MDC is represented by a white man,
John Drollent Houghton, who has the support of commercial white
farmers."
The government-controlled media, obsessed with maligning the MDC,
ignored many incidents of political violence, which were largely
attributed to ZANU PF by the private media. They reported 17 incidents
during the week, confirming that this barbaric practice has become
a feature of Zimbabwe’s elections. The government media, which only
carried denial reports, was at pains to present ZANU PF as a peace-loving
and democratic party. And they even downplayed incidents of violence
during polling to give the impression that voting, which was marred
by apathy, was peaceful. For example, ZTV (30/8, 8pm) reported that,
"Voting…in various towns and cities around the country
started peacefully today with no major incidents reported."
3FM (31/8, 8pm) followed suit, reporting that "voting
in Ruwa was peaceful with minor incidents of violence being experienced".
No detail was given about these incidents. Similarly, Radio Zimbabwe
(31/8, 8pm) reported vaguely that incidents of violence were "
low". The Sunday Mail (31/8) story, Polls
off to a peaceful start despite pockets of apathy, provided
a similar illusion.
However, The Standard and Studio 7 (31/8) disputed such claims
and reported that the MDC had alleged that its candidate Murisi
was assaulted by ZANU PF supporters on the first day of polling
while a car belonging to MDC MP and polling agent, Blessing Chebundo
was stoned in Kwekwe. Meanwhile evidence emerged during the week
that appeared to vindicate claims, mostly by the opposition, that
sections of the judiciary has been subverted to serve the interests
of ZANU PF instead of democracy.For example, The Herald and
Chronicle (27/8) reported that Justice Tedias Karwi had
dismissed the MDC’s urgent application seeking to bar security forces
from running the elections. The judge reportedly said the MDC had
"failed to disclose the basis upon which the application
could be treated as urgent," despite the fact the elections
were a few days away.
In another case, The Herald and The Daily News (30/8)
revealed that Justice Ben Hlatshwayo had thrown out an application
by 11 aspiring MDC candidates for Chegutu council seeking to reconvene
the nomination court on the grounds that they were prevented from
registering for the elections by ZANU PF supporters. The Herald
quoted Hlatshwayo as saying he "would give reasons
for his judgment in due course".
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