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Alternative sources of information threatened
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Media Weekly Update 2004-24
Monday June 14th – Sunday June 20th 2004

THE government’s intolerance of critical viewpoints and its efforts to stifle the few remaining alternative sources of information accessible to Zimbabweans assumed greater momentum during the week. Having succeeded in closing down yet another locally based privately owned newspaper, The Tribune, under controversial circumstances, the government appeared to have turned its sights on the South African-based weekly, The Mail and Guardian and the privately owned radio station, Studio 7, which it accuses of disseminating anti-Zimbabwe propaganda from Botswana.

The Voice of America (VoA) runs Studio 7 under its Africa service programme while Zimbabwean publisher Trevor Ncube owns The Mail and Guardian.

ZBC (14/6, main news bulletins), The Herald and Chronicle (15/6) reported Information Minister Jonathan Moyo as having officially objected to his Botswana counterpart, Boyce Sebetela, to the hosting of the radio station through that country’s medium wave frequency (909.000kHz). The two government dailies quoted Moyo as saying government would not have been bothered had the station been broadcasting from "the moon or United States" since VoA is an extension of US propaganda. Said Moyo: "What is an issue is that there is a specific broadcasting material content branded as Studio 7 which can be received on short-wave and that material is found on a frequency allocated to Botswana." Moyo was not asked whether VoA’s use of a Botswana frequency constituted a crime.

However, Studio 7 (15/6) did shed some light on the legal status of the station. It noted: "The International Broadcasting Bureau has a longstanding agreement for a transmission site in Botswana which allows VoA to broadcast on short-wave and medium wave to all of Southern Africa. People around the world including Southern Africa have long relied on VoA as a trusted source of news."

In another related matter, The Sunday Mail (20/6) used unnamed sources to build a case against The Mail and Guardian, which it warned, could soon "find itself in trouble with Zimbabwe authorities" for allegedly using "unregistered" local journalists as correspondents and planning to publish the paper clandestinely in the country without registration as stipulated under Zimbabwe’s repressive media laws. No evidence was provided to substantiate the claims. Rather, the paper tried to dignify its specious claims by roping in the Media and Information Commission (MIC) head, Tafataona Mahoso, who said that if the allegations against the paper were true his commission would seek answers on the matter from the relevant authorities and even from "those who regulate the media in South Africa".

And on the home front, the government media continued with its one-sided coverage of the closure of The Tribune, designed to perpetuate MIC’s justification of the shutdown. For example, The Herald and the Chronicle (18/6) based their coverage of the alleged "mystery" surrounding the ownership structure of the weekly paper almost exclusively on the MIC’s interpretation of the matter and drowned the explanation from the paper’s owner, Kindness Paradza.

In fact, while the two papers quoted the MIC querying the "real owners" of The Tribune because its five directors "hold only 100 shares of the 20 000 authorised shares" they did nothing to verify Paradza’s claims that only 100 of the 20,000 shares had been issued while the rest remained unissued so as to accommodate future shareholders as per corporate practice.

Sadly, the private media did not clarify the matter either, forcing The Tribune directors to do this via an advertisement they inserted in The Standard.

To add to Zimbabweans’ information woes, Studio 7 (18/6) Radio Zimbabwe and ZTV (18/6, 8pm) reported that the Parliamentary Committee on Transport and Communications had accused Moyo of meddling in the affairs of ZBC, thereby eroding its independence and threatening its viability. In fact, this further confirmed the long held suspicion that Moyo was behind the broadcaster’s partisan editorial content. However, the government media downplayed this revelation by suffocating it with Moyo’s denial.

Meanwhile, mystery continued to shroud the exact role of Transmedia Corporation Private Limited, which the Business section of The Herald (17/6) reported as having been licensed by the Broadcasting Authority of Zimbabwe (BAZ) "in terms of the Broadcasting Services Act no CAP.2:06 …to exclusively utilize the Ultra High Frequency (UHF) for the provision of data casting and web casting." The report said Transmedia, whose core business was signal transmission, could use the UHF platform "to provide Internet and email access to corporate bodies, cyber cafes, small offices, home offices and residential users".

However, besides drowning its readers in technical jargon over the use of the UHF platform, the paper did not give any background to the communications company or spell out exactly how it was going to use the UHF frequency.

ZTV (15/6, 8pm) and Power FM (16/6, 6am) reports on this development were equally hazy thereby leaving their audiences no wiser on the exact role of Transmedia. Interestingly, The Herald (15/6) fleetingly revealed that it was through investigations by Transmedia that had established that "the Voice of America propaganda station was being transmitted" from Botswana.

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