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Power
of propaganda
Media Monitoring
Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2004-33
Monday August 16th - Sunday August 22th 2004
During the week
the results of an authoritative survey assessing the popularity
of President Mugabe were released, revealing a dramatic increase
in the public's trust in President Mugabe, rising from 20
percent in 1999 to 46 percent this year.
Three respected research
organisations were involved in the "Afrobarometer" survey,
which attributed this increase to the growing intensity of the propaganda
pumped out by the government-controlled media and the strangling
of the independent media in the country.
The Zimbabwe Independent
(20/8) quoted the survey as saying: "In a setting where the
mass media have been strangled and the diet of public information
is tightly controlled, many Zimbabweans have apparently succumbed
to Zanu PF's view of a country beset by internal and external
enemies."
Certainly, government's
concerted efforts to crush the independent media and its unrelenting
grip on the public media to disseminate its messages have suffocated
all but the last vestiges of public democratic discourse in the
country. Predictably, these measures have resulted in the collapse
in the number of alternative sources of information that can be
accessed by the public, who are, in turn, narrowly "informed"
by the limited sources of information available to them -
the government controlled media.
This is the essence of
propaganda and it is not surprising that the survey was entitled,
The Power of Propaganda: Public Opinion on Zimbabwe.
However, The Sunday News'
Mzala Joe (22/8) disputed this reasoning. Describing the Afrobarometer
as "racist", the faceless columnist claimed that President
Mugabe enjoyed public trust "because of his commitment and
dedication to the people", adding that "the public media
has merely reported what President Mugabe does . . . (and) does
not lie".
He further claimed that
the President's popularity was on the increase because the
"public is sick and tired of the lies" in the "opposition
Press" such as the Zimbabwe Independent, "which never
says anything true or good about President Mugabe".
But a report by Zimbabwe
Online (23/8) revealed the extent to which the government has hijacked
the public media to raise its own profile by tarnishing that of
the country's political opposition.
It reported that Information
Minister Jonathan Moyo had ordered editors of the government controlled
media to intensify their propaganda against the opposition MDC ahead
of next year's general election.
The report quoted editors
as having said Moyo criticised journalists from the official media
for being lenient in their coverage of the MDC and instructed them
to use their papers, television and radio stations to "bury
the puppet MDC".
An unnamed journalist
who attended the meeting was also quoted claiming: "The Minister
said he did not want to see a story that gave the MDC any measure
of legitimacy. He said our job should now be to write obituaries
on the opposition".
Interestingly, the recently
adopted SADC protocol on elections compels member states to give
all political parties equal access to the public media as one of
the prescribed conditions for holding free and fair elections.
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