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Elections
Countdown
Media Monitoring
Project of Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2005-06
Monday February 7th - Sunday February 13th 2005
THE country's
forthcoming general election continued to generate considerable
interest in the media, which devoted 175 stories to the issue. A
total of 108 reports appeared in the government media and the remaining
67 in the private media. However, the official media's coverage
of the issue remained disproportionately pro-ZANU PF. For example,
out of the 108 stories the government media carried on electoral
and politically related issues, 74 of them (69%) passively trumpeted
the campaign activities of ZANU PF while the opposition MDC was
only covered in six (6%) stories. The rest of the stories dealt
with other election related issues, including administrative ones.
Notably, these media ignored the campaign activities of other opposition
parties. Moreover, the six stories that the government media carried
on the MDC were mainly used to project a bad image of the party
such as the in-house fighting that rocked the party in Masvingo
recently.
The Herald (7/2),
for example, even lied that MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai -campaigning
for his party in Masvingo - was out of the country to meet his "backers"
instead of campaigning at home. The paper (8/2) did not even retract
its apparent falsehood despite running an MDC denial story, which
it buried in its news Briefs column. Conversely, the government
media adopted a slavishly pro-ZANU PF stance in reporting ruling
party matters as exemplified by ZBH. The government broadcaster
devoted 22 of the 45 reports it carried on the campaign activities
of ZANU PF to report glowingly on the launch of the party's poll
campaign. Its partisan presentation of electoral and politically
related issues in the country was also reflected in its sourcing
pattern as indicated in the table.
Voice distribution
on ZBH
| Voice |
Number
of voices |
| Government
and Zanu PF |
67
|
| MDC
|
1
|
| Alternative
voices |
8
|
| Zimbabwe
Republic Police |
3
|
| Povo
|
12 |
| Total
|
91
|
Notably, President
Mugabe alone was cited 16 times out of the 67 ZANU PF voices sourced,
courtesy of his over-publicized speech during his party's campaign
launch. Besides, half of the alternative voices quoted were ZANU
PF apologists, such as William Nhara and MacDonald Charumbira.
The opposition
was ruthlessly exiled from the public eye, with MDC's Welshman Ncube
being the only official to get airtime (20 seconds) on ZTV
(10/2, 8pm)
denouncing political violence. His views however, among others,
were reported in the context of lending credence to President Mugabe
and ZANU PF's calls for the need to hold peaceful elections. The
private media appeared to have reasonably balanced coverage of the
activities of the country's main political parties by devoting 13
stories to ZANU PF and nine to the MDC. Notably, The Daily Mirror
stable published six of the 13 stories on the ruling party's campaign
activities. However, the private media also did not publicize much
of the smaller opposition parties' activities. They only carried
two reports on the electoral concerns of the United Parties and
the independent candidate for Harare Central, Margaret Dongo.
None of the
stories by the official media scrutinized the country's electoral
framework. The five reports they carried on administrative electoral
issues were mere official announcements that included the declaration
of the polling day of March 31st as a public holiday and government's
intention to gazette rules regulating political parties' access
to ZBH. Moreover, they ignored the huge increase in the registration
fees for candidates from $100,000 to $2 million per contestant and
the equally steep increase in the amount charged for securing the
voters' roll from $200,000 to $5 million.
Critical analysis
on the impact of the new fees structure was only made in the private
media, which carried nine stories on the subject. Studio 7 and SW
Radio Africa (7/2), for example, quoted officials from the MDC and
the newly formed Zimbabwe Youth Alliance arguing that the new fees
would severely restrict the participation of opposition parties
with little financial resources in the election. The government
media provided greater publicity (15 stories) to calls by the authorities
and civic society on the need for peaceful elections, but ZBH underreported
cases of politically motivated violence in the country as shown
in Fig 2.
Fig 2 Electronic
media's coverage of politically motivated violence and harassment
| Station |
Number of reports |
Number
of incidents |
|
ZTV
(8pm) |
1 |
1
|
|
Radio
Zimbabwe |
0 |
0
|
|
Power
FM |
0 |
0
|
|
Studio
7 |
5 |
5
|
|
SW
Radio Africa |
3 |
3
|
|
Total
|
9 |
9
|
Nearly all those
reported as being responsible for the violence or harassment were
recorded as either ZANU PF members or State security agents, while
the victims were almost always identified as perceived MDC supporters.
Only in two cases were MDC activists identified as the perpetrators.
In one of the cases, reported by SW radio Africa (10/2) and Studio
7 (12/2), faction fighting broke out in the MDC over the selection
of a party candidate to represent the opposition party in Masvingo
Central, while the other report, broadcast by ZTV (7/2, 8pm), accused
the MDC of assaulting ZANU PF activists in Johannesburg, South Africa.
The report, sourced only from ZANU PF, was however dismissed as
an "absolutely ...malicious allegation" by the MDC's SA representative,
Jabulani Mkwananzi, on Studio 7 (7/2).
Similarly, the
government newspapers reported two incidents of violence recorded
during the MDC's intra-party fighting in Masvingo as well as in
Norton where ZANU PF activists allegedly beat up members of the
public, suspected MDC supporters and the police. The two stories
also appeared in the private media. Otherwise, private newspapers
carried five more separate reports, all of which accused ZANU PF
activists of instigating violence mainly against MDC supporters.
Among the reports was the Zimbabwe Independent (11/2) round-up story,
Violence hots up, which recorded four incidents of politically motivated
violence and persecution of MDC MPs.
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