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International
relations
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2004-44
Monday November 1st - Sunday November 7th 2004
THE four-day
visit by a Chinese delegation presented the government-controlled
media with the opportunity to spruce up government’s battered international
image.
They gave the
impression that despite the alleged plot by the imperialist West
to turn the world against Zimbabwe, the country still enjoyed support
from members of the international community, among them China.
And as the week
drew to a close, Power FM (6/11, 1pm), Radio Zimbabwe & ZTV
(6/11, 8pm) and The Sunday Mail (8/10) added Equatorial Guinea to
this list of friends after President Mugabe reportedly got a "hero’s
welcome" on arrival at Malabo for his three-day State visit
to that tiny West African country.
But despite
the government media’s calculated efforts to use China and Equatorial
Guinea’s friendship as a measure of Zimbabwe’s acceptance into the
international fold, the private media gave a different picture.
For example,
SW Radio Africa (3/11) and The Financial Gazette (4/11) revealed
that trouble was actually brewing for the authorities with reports
that the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU), angered
by the humiliating deportation of its senior officials, was mobilising
civic groups in the region to "seal entry points into Zimbabwe
for four days" from December 4 to 8 in a move the Gazette noted
could trigger a diplomatic rift between South Africa and Zimbabwe.
In the same
bulletin, SW Radio Africa also reported on plans by the Southern
African Trade Union Co-ordinating Council (SATUCC), which represents
13 labour bodies in the SADC region, to hold a meeting in South
Africa to discuss the COSATU deportation, among other issues.
The government
media largely ignored these events.
The Sunday Mail
for example, only referred to COSATU’s threat to barricade Zimbabwe’s
borders as part of its response to the planned protest against government’s
poor human rights record.
Without treating
the matter fairly, the paper simply slandered the pending COSATU
action on the unfounded grounds that the labour body was being coaxed
into taking such action by the "British government using Anglo-American
interests in the region".
The paper fingered
the new British ambassador to Zimbabwe, Dr Rod Pullen, as working
with four sister embassies in Botswana, Malawi, Zambia and Mozambique
to "coordinate and make real" COSATU’s plans.
Except for Information
Minister Jonathan Moyo, the rest of the story’s sources remained
unnamed.
Earlier, The
Herald (3/11) attempted to link Pullen to the underground pressure
group, Zvakwana, on the absurd basis that a letter he wrote to Social
Welfare Minister Paul Mangwana seeking a meeting to discuss support
social services programmes arrived "on the same day" as
a Zvakwana letter to the minister protesting the deportation of
the COSATU officials.
In fact, the
government media’s obsession with attacking any criticism levelled
against the authorities also resulted in The Herald (1/11) passively
allowing its "political commentators" to launch personal
attacks against a senior ruling Botswana Democratic Party (BDP)
official, Patrick Balopi, for accusing President Mugabe for running
down the Zimbabwean economy.
The commentators
appeared especially rankled by the fact that BDP executive secretary
Botsala Ntuane supported Balopi, saying it was "within his
rights" to criticise Mugabe.
Meanwhile, the
Independent reported the European Union parliamentarians (MEPs)
as having resolved to bar ruling party politburo member Kumbirai
Kangai, who is on the list of the 95 associates of President Mugabe
banned from travelling to the EU under its targeted sanctions regime,
from attending the EU-ACP meeting due to be held in the Netherlands
later this month.
The paper quoted
the co-spokesman on Foreign Affairs and Human Rights in the European
Parliament, Godfrey van Orden, as saying there were making "representations
to the Dutch government" that Kangai should not be given a
visa as it would be "quite wrong for politicians such as ourselves
to sit down in a meeting with a banned individual".
But despite
such developments, ZTV (5/11, 6pm) still sought to give the impression
that Zimbabwe’s international stature was improving as Western powers
were beginning to recognise government as legitimate.
Australian Ambassador
John Shepherd was reported as having told Vice-President Joseph
Msika that his country respected the Zimbabwean government because
it was legitimately elected.
Msika was quoted
humbling the Australian envoy, accusing his country of working with
Britain in "demonising" Zimbabwe.
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