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Lupane
by-election
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2004-19
Monday May 10th – Sunday May 16th
The media, especially
those from the government-controlled stable, failed once more to
encourage transparency in the conduct of local elections as illustrated
by their inability to demand unconditional accountability in the
way the authorities prepared for and held the just ended Lupane
by-election.
As a result,
this compromised the fairness and quality of the news the electorate
received, and indeed, the atmosphere under which the poll was held.
For example,
all 11 stories the national broadcaster carried on the electoral
process were handouts from the Electoral Supervisory Commission
(ESC) and merely echoed the commission’s sentiments on the poll
without question.
Consequently,
a thorough examination of the electoral process was ignored. The
government media merely gave information on the number of registered
voters, election monitors and the location and the total number
of polling stations.
Even then, this
crucial information was only made available to the electorate on
the eve of the election.
The private
media did not fare any better in the 13 reports they carried on
the elections. These media largely quoted the MDC accusing ZANU
PF of intimidating the electorate without corroborating the veracity
of the claims.
Neither did
they cover the election manifestos of the candidates for the electorate
to make informed choices.
Typically, the
government-controlled Press carried nine articles campaigning for
ZANU PF’s candidate while ignoring the campaign activities of the
opposition MDC and its candidate. In fact, the opposition and its
candidate were either denigrated or blamed for causing violence
in Lupane in the four articles in which they were mentioned.
ZBC followed
a similar trend in the eight stories it dedicated to ZANU PF’s campaign
activities. Only Studio 7 aired the activities of the MDC candidate
on two occasions but featured none on the ZANU PF candidate.
But while reports
in the government media were saturated by either the ESC’s one-sided
assessments of the poll as generally free and fair or partisan reports
on ZANU PF’s campaign trails, only the private media queried the
environment in which the by-election was being held by raising concerns
of alleged violence and intimidation against the MDC by ruling party
supporters.
For example
SW Radio Africa, which alone carried six stories on the matter,
quoted several MDC officials complaining about various electoral
irregularities during the poll.
MDC Secretary-General
Welshman Ncube told the private radio station (10/5) that the level
of intimidation in Lupane was "very high"
and that local villagers had been threatened with "the
return of the Gukurahundi should they not vote for ZANU-PF".
MDC spokesperson Paul Themba Nyathi (SW Radio Africa (14/5) echoed
Ncube’s claims, adding that traditional leaders were also involved
in the harassment of opposition supporters.
Studio 7 (15/5)
cited three incidents where chiefs were said to have been moving
around polling stations wearing ZANU-PF regalia and mobilizing people
to vote.
The government
media suffocated this apparent abuse of traditional chiefs by ZANU
PF to win elections for them. For example, the Chronicle
(13/5) merely reported Local Government Minister Ignatius Chombo
telling 600 Lupane "traditional leaders… that the government
was committed to improving their welfare" during a campaign
rally.
In fact, the
Zimbabwe Independent (14/5) revealed that government had set aside
an "unbudgeted $27,5 billion on chiefs’ vehicles and other
perks". The paper viewed this as a "move calculated
to win their support ahead of parliamentary elections currently
scheduled for March."
However, the
Council of Chiefs secretary-general Fortune Charumbira defended
the move saying the scheme was similar to that for parliamentarians
where government provided them with loans to buy vehicles.
The Chronicle
(13/5) reported without question that chiefs from Silobela and Lower
Gweru had "pledged to ensure that ZANU PF regains the two
parliamentary seats in their areas it lost in 2000 after they were
given a prominent role in the selection of candidates".
The government
media were clearly unwilling to examine these unorthodox electoral
campaign tactics and largely ignored the ruling party’s intimidation
of the Lupane electorate.
And where they
were obliged to admit to outbreaks of violence in the constituency,
they vaguely referred to them as "clashes",
(Radio Zimbabwe 13/5, 1pm) or "skirmishes"
(Power FM 11/5, 8pm) to obscure the identity of the perpetrators
and soften the ugly impact on the conduct of the poll.
Only where the
MDC was accused of being responsible for the violence were these
media specific (Power FM, 11/5, 8pm, 12/5, 1pm; the Chronicle,
12/5; and Radio Zimbabwe, 14/5, 1pm). No due care was made to balance
or corroborate these accusations with independent sources.
For example,
the Chronicle (12/5) reported that a ZANU PF supporter was "suddenly
attacked" and allegedly axed by MDC’s "weapon wielding
activists" while putting up campaign posters for the ruling
party’s candidate. The paper claimed that the campaign had been
"peaceful until (the) incident".
But contrary
to this report by the Chronicle (and Radio Zimbabwe), The Tribune
(14/5) quoted the MDC district information secretary
David Nyathi giving more context to the circumstances leading to
the violence.
He claimed MDC
supporters had retaliated after ZANU PF supporters had attacked
them while they were putting up their own campaign posters. Nyathi
said the police had only arrested MDC activists, including the party’s
polling agents. He said: "There is no justice for us. We
cannot complain to the police because ZANU PF supporters will never
be arrested."
Nyathi’s account
found corroboration from reports in The Zimbabwe Independent
and The Daily Mirror (13/5).
SW Radio
Africa (13/5) reported a Lupane magistrate discharging 11 of the
arrested MDC activists for lack of evidence.
The Standard
(16/5) reported that the police had arrested two other MDC activists
who claimed they had been kidnapped and tortured by war veterans
but who the police accused of perpetrating violence against ZANU
PF supporters.
The two were
allegedly arrested when they went to report their ordeal to the
police. However, no comment was sought from the police.
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