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Glaring information vacuum caused by the closure of The Daily News
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2003-37
Monday September 15th - Sunday September 21st 2003

The glaring information vacuum caused by the closure of The Daily News was greatly felt during the week, as this left a large section of the public at the mercy of simplistic and partisanship reporting of the government-controlled media.

Only those with the opportunity to tune into private radio stations such as SW Radio Africa and Studio 7 and read independent weeklies managed to get alternative viewpoints and analytical coverage of topical issues.

In fact, nothing aptly demonstrates the urgent need for an independent daily paper more than the way the government-controlled media covered the introduction of the bearers’ cheques, which is yet another government stopgap measure to alleviate the persistent cash shortages. The new cheques, which follow hard on the introduction of the ill-fated travellers’ cheques, are in the denomination of $5,000, $10,000 and $20,000. According to The Herald (17/9) the cheques would "be as good as cash and circulate freely and can be used for all transactions as money".

The government-controlled media merely welcomed the latest government move to arrest the shortage of cash without asking pertinent questions. For example, they did not challenge government on why it preferred printing cheques instead of real notes if indeed it was using the same paper to print money. Further, they did not explain why government would introduce the cheques barely a week before availing the new bank notes, which it previously claimed would solve the cash crisis. They were seemingly blind to the fact that this latest development is an unwitting acknowledgement by government that its intended introduction of the new $500 and $1,000 bills, defied basic economics, especially when inflation is currently pegged at 427 percent (The Business Tribune, 18/9).

In fact, the denominations of the cheques are clear evidence of government’s acknowledgement of the gravity of the situation. All along government has interestingly been turning a deaf ear to calls by economists to print notes of higher denominations to arrest the worsening cash crisis. As if to further demonstrate its failure to handle the situation, government announced in The Herald and Chronicle (20/9) that it would extend its earlier deadline for replacing the old $500 bill with new one from September 26 to December 31 this year. Once again economists had earlier advised government against hurried replacement of old bills. However, with no independent daily paper to timeously expose government’s propaganda, the public will remain subjected to half-truths, distortions and partisanship reporting.

Press freedom under siege
The transformation of the government-controlled media into slavish megaphones of government was further exposed when they unashamedly celebrated the State’s closure of the Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe (ANZ), which published the country’s only independent daily newspaper, The Daily News and a weekly The Daily News on Sunday. Unlike the private media that condemned the closure and rightly described it as an assault on freedom of expression, the government-controlled media welcomed the move as a demonstration of government’s commitment to upholding the rule of law. However, they omitted to inform their audiences of the repressive nature of the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA), which the State used to shut down ANZ.
As if that was not enough, they even encouraged government to take more punitive measures against the company, oblivious to the fact that freedom of expression and democracy were the ultimate victims of such undemocratic acts. It was therefore not surprising that when the government appointed Media and Information Commission (MIC) led by Tafataona Mahoso refused to register ANZ on September 19th, the government controlled media merely reported the matter without any questioning.

At the beginning of the week, The Herald and Chronicle (15/9) seemed to agitate for the closure of ANZ publications when they reported that The Daily News risked "having all its equipment confiscated by the State", adding, "it is also not automatic that the paper will be licensed if it decides to register". The two papers then quoted unnamed "legal experts" as having urged ANZ to "sell its business to other people who could then apply for registration", adding, "it’s difficult to see how an outlaw that has been operating illegally can be registered". But then the papers did not state which section of the repressive law the "experts" were basing their argument on.

That same evening, 3FM (15/9,8pm) quoted Information Minister Jonathan Moyo as having justified government stance against ANZ saying it was "…a demonstration of the Zimbabwe government’s commitment to the rule of law which the Strive Masiyiwa-owned paper purports to champion". Just like its stable mates, the government-controlled broadcaster merely churned out Moyo’s statements without analysing the underlying implications of such an intolerant decision on the freedom of the Press. That was left to SW Radio Africa (15/9). It quoted MISA Information Officer, Rashweat Mukundu, as saying AIPPA "is a vindictive law that was crafted specifically to deal with the private media…" The MDC spokesman, Paul Themba Nyathi, concurred saying AIPPA was used for "…oppressing the people of Zimbabwe…"

But the government-controlled media would not budge. For example, The Herald (16/9) comment, Action against Daily News proper, commended the closure saying ANZ "should have simply closed shop on its own and stood by its principle" if it was opposed to AIPPA. The Chronicle (17/9) went further and presented the Zimbabwean government as having been magnanimous for not closing the ANZ earlier, saying this showed "how tolerant the authorities in Zimbabwe are, even to dissenting voices like The Daily News".
However, The Business Tribune (18/9) disagreed saying government should have displayed "the same magnanimity it has shown with errant banks and assisted it (ANZ) register".

The bias of the government-controlled media in covering the issue was demonstrated by their failure to accord ANZ platform to explain why they decided not to register with MIC in the first place. Only the private media sought its position. Studio7 (15/9) quoted ANZ Legal Advisor, Gugulethu Moyo, saying her company felt the registration requirements violated their constitutional rights. Said Moyo: "If you were challenging the death penalty you would not first really expect to be hanged before you could actually challenge whether this was constitutional or not." The Standard (21/9) seemed to agree saying ANZ had taken "a principled stand" because they felt AIPPA "impinged on their freedom to exercise their profession freely".

Barely a day after The Herald and Chronicle (15/9) suggested punitive measures that could be meted on ANZ, ZTV (16/9, 8pm) reported that, "the police are currently in the process of removing property from the ANZ offices." The Herald and Chronicle (17/9) carried similar reports and like ZTV presented the seizure of ANZ property as the right course of justice. Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) spokesman Wayne Bvudzijena was quoted saying the police had confiscated ANZ equipment because they wanted to use it as exhibits in court. But the company’s chief executive officer, Samuel Sipepa Nkomo, pointed out in the same reports, that the police could use copies of newspapers published in the past as evidence in their case against the company, in which they are charging ANZ of operating illegally.

There was no attempt to fully analyse the legality of the police action. In fact, it was such police action that prompted the company to file an urgent High Court chamber application seeking to stop them from removing company equipment.

When the courts ruled in favour of ANZ and ordered its re-opening saying the Supreme Court ruling had not made the company an "illegal operator", The Herald and the Chronicle (19/9) interpreted it differently. They quoted unnamed "legal experts" as having described the ruling "as curious because it had a written judgement on it yet judgements are written after the final order is granted". ZTV (18/9, 8pm) buried the news deep in its bulletin.

However, any hopes of ANZ’s publications hitting the streets were immediately shattered when The Herald and the Chronicle (20/9) revealed that MIC had "unanimously agreed not to register" the company, a day after the High Court had granted it a provisional order to operate. MIC argued that ANZ had failed "to meet the requirements of the law". The coincidence of the MIC’s decision and the High Court ruling was left begging for analysis. Further, the Zimpapers dailies did not find MIC’s decision curious considering that it had previously announced that it would take time for it to come up with a decision on whether to register ANZ or not.This was only highlighted in The Standard (21/9).

Besides pandering to the whims of the authorities, the government-controlled media conveniently ignored the position of both civic and international organisations on the issue. Their concerns were only carried in the private media. For instance, Studio 7 (15/9) quoted Committee for the Protection of Journalists official Anne Cooper who condemned the closure of ANZ saying "the Committee to protect journalists opposes registration requirements not just in Zimbabwe but in any country where…you have to register with the government…"

South African newspaper editors and opposition parties were quoted saying the closure was reminiscent of the apartheid era and exposed government’s intolerance of criticism. The Financial Gazette (18/9) quoted Zimbabwe Union of Journalists president Matthew Takaona as having said the closure was "a disaster for the media in Zimbabwe". University of Zimbabwe law lecturer, Lovemore Madhuku, agreed saying the "diversity of opinion will be severely curtailed", adding that in the absence of The Daily News, government "will be encouraged to do or not to do certain things because it will know for sure that no one will be there to expose it", and that such a scenario "may even worsen human rights violations in Zimbabwe".

The Zimbabwe Independent quoted the Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) lamenting the Supreme Court ruling saying it "effectively resulted in the biggest assault on the right to freedom of information in the history of our independence", adding that, "Repression may therefore sadly have found itself an ally against human rights defenders, in the form of the judiciary". In its comment, the paper described the closure of ANZ as "a political move designed to suppress freedom of expression in Zimbabwe". It further pointed out that the law government was using to justify its actions "is a poorly drafted Act which is not only in conflict with Section 20 of the constitution but violates a number of international conventions to which Zimbabwe is party".
However, ZTV (16/9,7am) revealed that government was seemingly not perturbed by such condemnation when it quoted Moyo, as saying, "…MIC would not be deterred by statements made by ANZ’s western sympathisers".

Commonwealth summit
The closure of ANZ came amid heated debate between South Africa and Australia, both members of the Commonwealth troika on Zimbabwe, on whether Zimbabwe should be invited to the Commonwealth meeting scheduled for December in Nigeria. While Australia made it abundantly clear that Zimbabwe should not be invited, South Africa on the other hand, was reportedly trying to canvass support for the country to be allowed to attend the meeting.

Predictably, the government-controlled media embraced South Africa’s stance and simply dismissed Australia’s position as "racist", arguing that its claims that the situation in the country continued to deteriorate were baseless. As a result, they conveniently failed to relate the closure of ANZ to the on-going human rights violations, which is one of the reasons the country was suspended from the Commonwealth.

However, the private media did. For example, Studio 7 (16/9) reported that "Western countries’ resolve to have Zimbabwe expelled from the Commonwealth seems to have intensified" as a result of the closure of ANZ.

The government-controlled media tried to downplay such repercussions of government’s gross violation of freedom of the Press by giving the impression that Zimbabwe has the backing of African countries in its campaign for readmission into the Club. For example, ZTV (16/9, 8pm) reported; "South Africa has warned Australia against using megaphone diplomacy in its attempts to bar President Robert Mugabe from attending this year’s Commonwealth Summit in Nigeria." A similar report appeared in The Herald (17/9). The paper, in an editorialised AFP article, tried to narrowly attribute Australian Premier John Howard’s resistance to have Zimbabwe invited to the meeting to the land issue, claiming that that the country was being persecuted "for its land reform exercise".
Subsequently, the paper (19/9) tried to divert attention from the issues of good governance Howard was raising by quoting Mudenge giving a lecture on the procedure used in inviting guests. Mudenge was quoted attacking Howard as a racist who had "abandoned his senses," claiming that "only the host country had the prerogative of inviting heads of State to the summit".

However, The Sunday Mirror (21/9) quoted the Commonwealth spokesman Joel Kibazo dismissing Mudenge’s claim, saying, "It’s not an issue who has the power, it is an issue of what is the common practice in the Commonwealth". The paper also noted that it was "unlikely that Nigeria will go against the grain and invite President Mugabe to Abuja in December".
In fact, SW Radio Africa (15/9) and Studio 7 (16/9) had earlier quoted the Commonwealth secretariat as saying President Mugabe would not attend the meeting as Zimbabwe and Pakistan were still suspended from the Commonwealth councils. The Financial Gazette corroborated this and pointed out that even Nigeria, which Mudenge was pinning his hopes on, had snubbed Zimbabwe. It quoted the Nigerian government official, Gbenga Ashiru, as saying, "Zimbabwe and Pakistan have not been invited to the Commonwealth summit because they are still under suspension for violating the 1991 Harare Declaration. There is no way the suspension of the two can be lifted before the summit". The paper also pointed out that South Africa had made a policy u-turn and was backing Nigeria’s stance on Zimbabwe. It noted that South Africa’s apparent policy shift came "against the back-drop of a police clampdown on Zimbabwe's only independent daily newspaper, The Daily News".

In view of such revelations, The Zimbabwe Independent then pointed out that the decision by Nigeria had "shattered Harare's claims to solidarity among African, Asian, Caribbean and Pacific nations and pushed Mugabe into further international isolation".

However, despite clear evidence that it was not only Howard who was against Zimbabwe’s attendance but even the country’s perceived key allies, The Herald (10/9) would not relent in its personal and vitriolic attack on Howard. In its comment, Howard should go hang, the paper described Howard’s comments on Zimbabwe’s as "reckless", and smacked "of arrogance of the foulest degree and should be condemned by all progressive people throughout the world". Without considering the reasons behind Howard’s stance, the paper further stated that Howard was "in a world of fantasy without the foggiest idea where his authority begins and ends", adding that Zimbabwe’s suspension from the Commonwealth "stinks to heaven with racism". It ignored the fact that the Commonwealth troika, which suspended Zimbabwe, had two African leaders.

Not to be outdone, The Sunday News (21/9) quoted "political analysts" as having said the 54-nation grouping "will disintegrate if the ‘White Commonwealth’ members continue with their onslaught on members of the Club who are fighting to economically empower their people by confronting colonial injustices". An advocate of ZANU-PF policies, Lawton Hikwa, who was masqueraded as an analyst, added, "If the white Commonwealth members insist on excluding Zimbabwe from the meeting, I can foresee a situation where Asian, African and Caribbean members boycott the meeting". Hikwa said besides the racial motive behind Zimbabwe’s suspension, " there is no reason whatsoever for the exclusion of Zimbabwe from Abuja".

Other ZANU-PF aligned analysts such as Tafataona Mahoso and Rino Zhuwarara- members of MIC, which refused to register ANZ - were also quoted in the Chronicle (16/9) shamelessly glossing over the country’s appalling human rights record. They were quoted claiming that Zimbabwe’s prospects for readmission into the Commonwealth were bright and dismissed reports of human rights violations as being "calculated to trigger anti-Zimbabwe sentiment and more punishment at CHOGM".

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