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The
Odzi murder and racism
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted of the Weekly Media Update 2004-21
Monday May 24th – Sunday May 30th 2004
THE government-controlled
media’s role as fully-fledged amplifiers of racial strife was highlighted
again this week following the alleged murder of a resettled black
farmer by a white commercial farmer in Odzi, Manicaland. These media’s
biased and xenophobic coverage of the incident, a distinctive echo
of their previous week’s coverage of the parliamentary altercation
between MDC MP Roy Bennett and Cabinet ministers Didymus Mutasa
and Patrick Chinamasa, made a mockery of professional journalistic
standards of fairness, accuracy and balance.
While the potential
costs of such irresponsible journalism have yet to be categorically
assessed, it is not surprising that the private media mainly attributed
the Odzi incident and several others that occurred in the week to
an orchestrated campaign of retribution against whites by ZANU PF
supporters following the Bennett fiasco.
But as accomplices
in this new wave of alleged government-instigated lawlessness, the
government media carried distorted versions of the circumstances
leading to the Odzi murder by giving the impression that Peter Spiro-Landos
had fatally shot Mike Mufambi "in cold blood".
Power FM (26/5,
8pm), The Herald and Chronicle (27/5) all promoted
this angle. Power FM, for example, claimed that the alleged murder
occurred after Spiro-Landos called for a meeting with resettled
farmers allocated portions of his Riverside Farm and accused them
of "grabbing his property". When they "disagreed
with him", it said, Spiro-Landos produced a pistol
and fired "straight into the group of farmers, killing
Mufambi" before war veterans disarmed him.
The Herald
agreed. It quoted police spokesman Oliver Mandipaka saying Spiro-Landos
"quarreled" with the farmers over boundaries
of his Riverside Farm before the shooting, while the Chronicle
argued that the farmer was only injured when the settlers disarmed
him and "meted out instant justice".
The reports
lacked independent confirmation, which only appeared in the private
media. SW Radio Africa (25/5) reported Spiro-Landos as having shot
Mufambi in self-defence after war veterans attacked the farmer for
allegedly "inflicting harm on government ministers"
and for being "related to Bennett by virtue of being
white."
The private
radio station also revealed that the latest harassment of Spiro-Landos,
which ended in the tragedy, was the fifth such attack against him
by the war veterans. On all occasions, the police refused to intervene,
claiming the matter was politically motivated. Reported the station:
"…Spiro kept going back to the police, until for the
fifth time the war vets assaulted him, broke his ribs…he got a chance
to pull his pistol and fire a shot at one of the war vets who died
instantly."
Studio 7 (26/5),
The Daily Mirror (27/5) and The Zimbabwe
Independent (28/5) corroborated the report. But
The Herald and Chronicle (27/5) still censored
these details of the incident when it quoted Mandipaka saying Spiro-Landos
had "endless clashes with some of the resettled farmers"
in order to "keep the whole property (Riverside Farm)
to himself". Mandipaka was not challenged to explain
what led to the ‘clashes’ or why the police had not intervened.
Instead, ZTV
(27/5,8pm) merely expanded on this one-sided account to stir up
racial tension. It reported that Zimbabweans had received "with
shock the death of Mufambi in a cold- blooded murder "
while "others (Zimbabweans) say it’s time government
repossesses all farms owned by whites." It claimed
that "the goings-on at Landos’ farm in Odzi…. have again
brought to the fore the question of whether government was not ill-
advised when it continued to extend the hand of reconciliation to
former white Rhodesians…" Radio Zimbabwe (27/5, 8pm)
quoted the Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans Association’s
retired Major Mudavanhu echoing these sentiments. He was particularly
outraged because "the late comrade…was killed…by a white
man who doesn’t accept…that we have repossessed our land…This is
similar to what Bennett did… in Parliament…"
ZTV (27/5, 8pm)
and Power FM (28/5 6am) featured similar inflammatory comments from
the Affirmative Action Group and the Zimbabwe Farmers Union. AAG’s
Esau Mupfumi was quoted saying that Mufambi’s death "shows
that whites will never change…They are a problem not only to us
and our children but will be a problem to the next generation. It
is difficult to keep them because they still have British and American
mentality."
The government
Press devoted a number of stories to this anti-white tirade, including
Rhodies need to draw lesson from Kondozi saga, Apartheid media
stoke fires of white panic, Odzi murder leaves unanswered questions
over co-existence (The Sunday Mail 30/5);
Bennett’s racist behaviour deplorable, detrimental to his ailing
party (Manica Post 28/5); and Killings won’t stop
land reform (The Herald (28/5). The
Chronicle’s comment (28/5) captured the tone of these articles,
claiming that Mufambi’s shooting showed that whites were "still
living in Rhodesia where blacks could just be killed like flies…"
ZTV contributed
to the government media’s inflammatory campaign against whites when
it broadcast a blatant falsehood in a survey to gauge the nation’s
feeling over the incident (27/5, 8pm). The national broadcaster
recklessly quoted an unnamed member of the public claiming falsely,
"Bennett killed someone in Parliament and nothing happened
to him."
By turning a
blind eye to the harmful consequences of such unrestrained racist
invective, incidents of racially motivated violence instigated by
ZANU PF activists to protest Bennett’s parliamentary misconduct
went unreported in the government media.
But the private
media duly pointed them out. They claimed that the Odzi incident
was part of the ruling party’s retribution campaign against its
perceived opponents, especially those from Manicaland, by using
Bennett’s parliamentary misbehaviour as an excuse. SW Radio Africa
(24/5) reported that ZANU PF "thugs" had
petrol-bombed MDC offices in Chimanimani, Bennett’s constituency,
while in Rusape, Mutasa was alleged to have ordered shops to close
and "forced people to attend demonstrations against Bennett".
The station also reported ZANU PF violence against the opposition
at Tanganda Business Centre in Chipinge where at least 35 people
were said to have fled their homes.
Studio 7 (25/5),
the Independent and The Standard (30/5) also
carried similar stories. The
Zimbabwe Independent, for example, quoted Justice for Agriculture
(JAG) vice chairman John Worsely-Worsick saying Manicaland has "become
the prime target of fresh invasions". Said Worsely-Worswick:
"The flavour of the (farm invasions) are very racist
and for the first time, the invaders are demanding that white farmers
leave Zimbabwe", a claim also made by Studio 7 (27/5).
The Independent reported that as a result, 10 farms had since
been invaded and that the invasions had also spread to Karoi, Chiredzi
and Kwekwe. The observation tallied with a report by SW Radio Africa
(25/5) on the abduction and assault by settlers of Anthony Boddington
and six game scouts working for Masapas Ranch in the Save Valley.
Boddington was ambushed together with his scouts and "beaten
for four hours…" as punishment for asking government
and police to remove them.
The government
media ignored the incident. They also ignored the violence perpetrated
by ZANU PF supporters during an anti-Bennett demonstration in Gweru
as illustrated by the Chronicle (28/5). Only The Standard
reported that ruling party supporters beat up innocent people in
the city and destroyed war veterans’ offices after failing to get
the food they had been promised for taking part in the demonstration
while the police "watched in silence".
The paper reported
that policemen from Gweru Rural Police Station "marched
and toy-toyed in the city centre" while singing government’s
‘Sendekera’ land reform jingle, adding that soldiers marching
and "chanting Zanu PF songs" have become
a common feature in Gweru.
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