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Government media and the England Cricket team
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2004-47
Monday November 22nd - Sunday November 28th 2004

THE government media’s reluctance to expose the authorities’ pathological hatred of a free Press was clearly illustrated by their crude attempts to suffocate facts surrounding the delay in the arrival of the England Cricket team, which is currently in the country for four one-day international cricket matches against Zimbabwe.

Instead of categorically informing their audiences that the visiting team had deferred travelling to Zimbabwe because government had barred 13 foreign journalists from covering the tour, these media feigned ignorance of the reasons for the delay.

Typically, ZTV (24/11, 8pm) in a 20-second item carried at the end of the bulletin, reported: "Unverified reports say the England Cricket team that was supposed to arrive at 9 am hasn’t", adding that the reasons for its non-appearance were "unknown".

It was only the next morning that audiences of the government media got a glimpse of why the team had not arrived on schedule through an AFP ‘brief’ tucked away on the back page of The Herald.

The story reported that England had cancelled their flight to Harare "pending further discussions with the Zimbabwean authorities over a number of British journalists who were denied visas" to cover the tour. This represented totally inadequate coverage of a major hitch to a highly publicized international tour and warranted greater prominence, not to mention a full and factual explanation.

The private media displayed no such hypocrisy.

SW Radio Africa (24&27/11), Studio 7 (25 &26/11), The Daily Mirror (25/11) and the Zimbabwe Independent (26/11) all gave detailed and factual accounts of the story.

For example, The Daily Mirror reported that the English team had suspended their trip to Zimbabwe after government had barred the journalists on political grounds. The paper cited a BBC interview in which Information Secretary George Charamba was quoted saying government had only accredited "bona fide media organisations" and banned those that are "political" because this was "game of cricket, not politics".

When it emerged that the authorities had backed down and revoked the ban on the journalists following threats of an England withdrawal from the tour, the government media downplayed this seemingly humiliating about-turn and muffled the truth.

Power FM (25/11, 1pm), for example, passively allowed Information Minister Jonathan Moyo to claim that delays in accrediting the 13 was "purely an administrative matter" which arose because the journalists had "supplied insufficient information" to government.

There was no attempt by the official media to reconcile Moyo’s claims with the initial reasons given by Charamba. Rather, The Herald (26/11) merely announced that government had accredited all journalists and unrepentantly maintained that some of them were "on a covert mission" using cricket as a cover.

An insight into why Moyo had climbed down on the matter appeared in the Independent. The paper revealed that ZANU PF information secretary Nathan Shamuyarira had overruled Moyo’s decision as he "thought nothing would be achieved by banning the journalists, except feeding negative publicity about government".

The government media’s efforts to suffocate the facts surrounding the cricket saga demonstrates a total disdain for their obligation to accurately inform the public of such important developments and clearly affirms their status as slavish conduits of government propaganda.

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