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Election
coverage fatigue
Media Monitoring
Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from the Weekly Media Update 2004-4
Monday
January 26th – Sunday February 1st 2004
The media’s
lack of professional resilience when covering elections was illustrated
again by the way in which they handled the Gutu North by-election.
The media generally gave scant attention to the election and, as
a result, omitted pertinent information on the electoral process,
which the ruling party has manipulated in the past to tilt the outcome
in its favour.
For example,
none the Press investigated the state of the voters’ roll, why the
opposition had been refused access to the consolidated roll, or
challenged the Registrar General’s office why it had set the election
dates during the week when previous polls have been held at weekends.
There was no information on the campaign manifestos of the contestants
nor on the location of polling stations.
The private
media focused largely on ZANU PF’s intimidatory campaign methods.
For instance, three of the five reports the private papers carried
were on ZANU PF violence or the intimidation of chiefs and MDC activists,
including its candidate, Crispa Musoni.
The chiefs were
reportedly told they would be stripped of their powers if ZANU PF
lost the election.
The rest were
on the Zimbabwe Civic Education Trust’s campaigns for peaceful elections
and ZANU PF’s abuse of national institutions and developmental projects
for campaigning.
The Standard
(1/2), for example, quoted Vice President Joseph Msika using the
commissioning of an irrigation scheme in Zvavahera Village in Gutu
North to campaign. Zimbabwe Electricity Supply Authority boss Sydney
Gata was also quoted at the same occasion telling villagers:
"Zesa is Zanu PF. If you see any trucks belonging to Zesa,
Arda (Agricultural Rural Development Authority) or DDF (District
Development Fund) doing work in the roads, you should know it is
Zanu PF doing it." He further urged directors of ZESA
"to learn Zanu PF slogans".
The Sunday
Mail (1/2) reported the event but censored Gata’s remarks. However,
it quoted Foreign Affairs Minister Stan Mudenge saying, "the
country’s sovereignty was sacrosanct and will never be lost through
the ballot box". The underlying implications of this
statement were not scrutinized.
The report was
one of the four stories carried by the government Press one of which
related to voter education. The other two denied private media reports
of ZANU PF violence against perceived opponents.
The trend was
similar on ZBC. The broadcaster carried three ZANU PF campaign stories
and four voter education reports. These included Msika in Zvavahera
where he invaribaly labelled the MDC as "sellouts, sponsored
stooges and anti-revolutionaries".
Like the government
Press, ZBC suffocated stories exposing violence against the opposition.
ZTV (30/1, 7am) however, confirmed private media reports that ZANU
PF was urging chiefs to bar the opposition from holding rallies
in their areas. But instead of condeming such undemocratic activities,
ZTV’s reporter passively endorsed the practice, saying chiefs did
not "want a party which promotes the interests of the
British colonisers".
Private radio
stations, which exposed this chicanery the previous week, condemned
it as a blatant subversion of the electoral process.
Besides exposing
ZANU PF’s violent campaign in Gutu North, the private media also
publicized other incidents of rights abuses committed by ZANU PF
supporters in other parts of the country. For example, SW Radio
Africa (26/1 and 27/01) reported that Zanu-PF youths had beaten
up MDC supporters in Chimanimani. A follow-up story appeared in
The Daily News on Sunday (1/2).
In fact, SW
Radio Africa (26/1) cited a report by the Zimbabwe Human Rights
NGO Forum on Zimbabwe’s human rights record, which revealed that
over 90 percent of the incidents of political violence reported
country-wide were perpetrated by Zanu-PF youths, with the police
failing to act.
This seemed
to be vindicated by a High Court ruling that awarded MDC activist
John Mukondwa $800,000 in damages after he was shot by a policeman
in a politically motivated incident before the 2002 presidential
election (The Daily News, 28/1). The officer was in the company
of ZANU PF youths who beat up and tortured Mukondwa.
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