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Opposition
coverage mere ZANU PF ruse
Njabulo Ncube,
The Financial Gazette
January 13, 2005
http://www.fingaz.co.zw/fingaz/2005/January/January13/7491.shtml
THE ZANU PF
government, under immense pressure to level the electoral playing
field as Zimbabwe’s crucial parliamentary polls draw closer, is
partially opening the airwaves to opposition political parties.
But analysts
are hardly impressed. They say the development is intended to hoodwink
regional leaders into believing that the government is committed
to the Mauritius protocol.
In what government
critics say is an unprecedented shift, the state broadcaster, the
Zimbabwe Broadcasting Holdings, formerly Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation
(ZBC), interviewed Welshman Ncube, the Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC) secretary general, last week to clarify his party’s position
regarding the parliamentary election, set for March.
During the same
week, an official from ZANU Ndonga, the tribal-based opposition
political party with a single seat in the 120-member Parliament,
was also interviewed on the popular vernacular radio station Radio
Zimbabwe.
Media activists
said this week they had also noted that opposition politicians,
especially those from the main opposition MDC, were also being "positively"
covered in the public print media.
Remius Makuwaza,
the MDC director of elections, was widely quoted in the state-controlled
Herald of last Thursday, while another ZANU Ndonga official was
also quoted, confirming his party’s participation.
Analysts who
spoke to The Financial Gazette this week said the increasingly ostracised
ZANU PF government, which for the past five years had effectively
shut out the opposition from the public media, was under pressure
to comply with the minimum standards set by Southern African Development
Commu-nity (SADC) heads of state for the staging of democratic elections,
which included granting unlimited access to opposition parties in
the public media.
Elections held
since the emergence of the MDC as a major political force have severely
dented President Rob-ert Mugabe’s legitimacy.
The main opposition
party, which the government accuses of being a Western front for
effecting regime change, claims that ZANU PF used bullying, intimidation
and outright violence against MDC supporters in the last round of
parliamentary and presidential elections.
The analysts
said with the country’s elections three months away, the government
would like to be seen to be adhering to some of the guidelines and
principles agreed by SADC in Mauritius last August, as ZANU PF was
no longer guaranteed the support of African states and institutions,
which had given the Zimbabwe government the benefit of the doubt
and, with it, vestiges of legitimacy. Member states are not, however,
legally obligated to adopt the SADC principles.
While President
Mugabe’s government has approved some of the changes agreed by SADC,
such as conducting voting in one day and the use of translucent
boxes, among other measures, the ruling party has maintained a grip
on the public media to the exclusion of all dissenting voices. Public
media institutions have frequently been used to carry virulent anti-opposition
propaganda.
Brian Kagoro,
the chairman of Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition, a grouping encompassing
350 civil society organisations, doubted the government’s sincerity
in granting access to the opposition and non-governmental organisations
with an interest in the forthcoming polls.
Kagoro said
the cosmetic changes recently noted in the state media were meant
to hoodwink people into believing that the opposition in Zimbabwe
had access to ZBH and state newspapers.
"This regime
has mastered the art of window-dressing," said Kagoro. "They
want the world to believe that the opposition has access to the
public media. The appearance of opposition politicians on national
television is for window-dressing purposes, nothing else. The truth
of the matter is that opposition political parties have no access
to the public media, period," he added.
Takura Zhangazha,
a media activist with the Media Institute of Southern Africa, said:
"The government is not being honest by pretending to grant
media access to the opposition.
"The MDC
is an important stakeholder in the political culture of Zimbabwe.
It should be given consistent media coverage . . . not only when
elections are around the corner. The opposition must be allowed
to flight their campaign adverts as well as buy airtime to educate
the electorate about their party policies."
Recently, ZBH
reportedly declined to air MDC advertisements, in a clear sign that
opposition parties were still far from getting access to the public
media, which continue to show blatant bias towards the ruling ZANU
PF party.
Information
minister Jonathan Moyo — who has presided over the entrenchment
of a starkly pro-ZANU PF stance in the government-owned press —
and Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa have recently stated that
the public media would only be open to a "loyal and patriotic
opposition".
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