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Print
and Electronic Daily Media Update #10
Media Monitoring
Project Zimbabwe
March 31, 2005
1. Print
Daily Update: March 31st
a. Administration
THE
Daily Mirror and the Chronicle were not readily available at the
time the report was compiled.
As the counting
of votes begun, The Herald carried largely pre-emptive reports on
the conduct of the election. All the seven stories the paper carried
on the administration of the poll mainly depicted it as having been
"exceptionally well organised". Only minor hurdles, some of which
the electoral authorities had no control over such as the sudden
death of the presiding officer of a polling station in Nyanga and
the invasion of the Sikumbi polling station in Binga by four charging
buffaloes were highlighted.
Major issues,
like the electoral officials' turning away of more than a hundred
thousand voters for various reasons, were not fully addressed. The
paper only noted: "There were isolated cases of some people being
turned away, mostly those who did not register or had gone to the
wrong constituency." Consequently, there was no attempt to link
this development with the authorities' inadequate election preparations
such as poor voter education. Instead, the paper emphasised more
on what it saw as a high voter turnout in the poll as exemplified
by its lead story, Good turnout in elections.
Similarly, the
paper gave more space to voters and observers (in two stories) complementing
the voting process as compared to other alternative observations.
For example, while The Herald quoted a statement by the Zimbabwe
Election Support Network (ZESN) chairman Reginald Matchaba-Hove
commending the peaceful nature of voting, it did not investigate
the nature of "minor cases of violence and intimidation" the civic
body said characterised the run-up to the election. Nor did the
paper verify what observers from the Centre for Peace Initiatives
in Africa (CPIA) claimed were efforts by various political parties
"to educate the electorate with material it deemed to be misleading".
Otherwise, as illustrated in Fig 1, The Herald stories were presented
chiefly through the eyes of government and ZANU PF officials.
Fig 1 Voice
distribution in The Herald
| Government |
ZANU
PF |
ZESN |
Editorial |
MDC |
ZEC |
| 3 |
7 |
1 |
2 |
1 |
5 |
On the other hand,
The Zimbabwe Independent carried10 stories on administrative issues
that were generally balanced. Three of the stories sought to balance
opinion between observers' approval of the peaceful environment
under which the election was held and the main opposition MDC's
views on the matter.
Besides updating
its audiences on the voting pattern during polling, the paper also
highlighted the high rejection rate of voters in six of the country's
provinces, which it quoted the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC)
as pegging at 133 155, almost 10 percent of the 1 340 073 people
that had voted in the six provinces by 9.30pm yesterday. The paper
quoted ZEC saying those turned away "were either not aware of the
constituency boundaries...or for failing to produce proper identification".
In addition, the paper carried two stories in which the MDC alleged
poll irregularities. The first story was about how the MDC had allegedly
"exposed" methods used by ZANU PF youths in Bulawayo's Western areas
to erase the indelible ink used in the voting process after a tip-off
by "concerned voters". The paper cited the MDC as saying the youths
were allegedly using a combination of "brake fluid, scouring powder
and lemon juice to cleanse themselves of the indelible ink" before
voting again, adding that the South African and SADC observer teams
had however refused to observe the process after the opposition
party notified them.
The other story
was on how ZANU PF had engaged an unnamed printing company to print
thousands of fliers discouraging voters from taking part in the
election by claiming that the MDC had withdrawn from the contest
due to government's non-compliance with the SADC guidelines on democratic
elections. The paper's sourcing pattern was generally balanced although
it discriminated against ZANU PF voices as shown in Fig 2
Fig 2 Voice
distribution in the Zimbabwe Independent
| MDC |
ALT |
ZEC |
FDI |
IND |
POV |
EDI |
| 5 |
2 |
2 |
1 |
1 |
2 |
1 |
b. Violence
THE Herald did not report on any cases of politically motivated
violence. However, it recorded three incidents related to election
crimes. They comprised the arrest of two "British" journalists,
picked by the police at a Norton polling station, for practicing
journalism in the country illegally and that of a woman voter from
Gweru who allegedly violated the Electoral Act by waving an open
palm (MDC symbol) at people waiting to vote.
The Zimbabwe Independent,
on the other hand, reported on two cases of politically motivated
violence and rights abuses. The perpetrators were ZANU PF and the
police while the victims were MDC polling agents and foreign journalists.
In addition, it recorded six incidents of election crimes. The perpetrators
of the crimes were MDC and ZANU PF supporters (one case each), farmers
and two journalists from the UK-based Sunday Telegraph.
Meanwhile The
Daily Mirror (31/03) carried an unsubstantiated report claiming
that, "an EU-orchestrated sub-plot to delegitimise the process has
already been set in motion." The report, which relied on unnamed
sources insinuating that the MDC was involved, quoted police spokesman
Wayne Bvudzijena confirming there were some people bent on causing
trouble after the elections, adding that the law enforcement agencies
were ready for any eventuality.
2. Daily Electronic
Media Update: 31st March 2005
a. Voting day
ZBH
(Power FM and ZTV) carried 46 stories on voting. All but three reports
gave the impression that polling was smooth. The three stories on
irregularities, two of which were on ZTV and one on Power FM, accused
the MDC of causing problems during voting. They reported that police
in Mashonaland West were investigating MDC candidate for Chinhoyi
Silas Matamisa for allegedly assaulting a voter in that constituency.
The other report was on the arrest in Gweru of one person who was
allegedly campaigning for the MDC in the vicinity of a polling station.
Although ZTV quoted
the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) Chairman Justice George
Chiweshe giving figures of voters who were turned away for "one
reason or another", it failed to challenge him to elaborate on the
reasons or view the issue as emanating from the commission's own
poor voter education exercise. In fact, ZBH's reluctance to fully
examine irregularities that characterised the voting process resulted
in the broadcaster over relying on ZEC for comment and largely ignoring
alternative views on the voting process.
Fig. 1 Number
of stories and voices quoted on ZBH's stations
| STATION |
No.
Stories |
ZANUPF |
MDC |
Govt |
ZRP |
ZEC |
Reporter |
Alt |
Ordinary
People |
Foreign |
| ZTV |
29 |
7 |
3 |
0 |
3 |
11 |
5 |
1 |
7 |
0 |
| Power
FM |
17 |
1 |
2 |
2 |
1 |
5 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
Notably, all
ZANU PF voices and selected members of the public who were quoted
hailed the voting process. The MDC voices that were quoted were
Morgan Tsvangirai and Job Sikhala, who both expressed confidence
that the opposition would win.
In contrast,
private radio stations exposed anomalies in some constituencies.
Although acknowledging that the voting day was generally peaceful,
Studio 7 carried five reports, which highlighted some irregularities
that marred voting. In one of its stories, the station reported
that Faith Based Mission, a group of churches observing the elections,
had recorded that Chief Maphosa in Maphisa was seen shuttling between
polling stations and that ZANU PF agents were ticking names of people
as they came to the polling stations in Pumula/Luveve constituency.
Another report
quoted Zimbabwe Election Support Network (ZESN) Chairman Reginald
Matchaba-Hove saying 16 observers from his organization were denied
entry into 16 polling stations in Harare, Masvingo and Matabeleland
North. He said as a result, "it becomes difficult to determine free
and fairness of the process especially since they missed the peak
hours of voting." In its other report the station reported that
ruling party activists were harassing MDC polling agents in Insiza.
Similarly, SW Radio Africa carried about nine stories on irregularities.
These included reports that:
Observers from
the Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace were turned away in
Manicaland.
- The Electoral
Supervisory Commission heads for Nyanga and Mutasa constituencies
were CIO operatives.
- An MDC polling
agent was abducted in Insiza while going to the polling station
- The MDC polling
agents were chased away from their stations by ZANU PF activists
in Manyame
- Thousands
of polling officers did not vote as they were deployed away from
their constituencies
- Some local
observers were denied access to polling stations in Masvingo
- There were
no local observers in some constituencies in Manicaland such as
Makoni
It was however,
difficult to assess if the station had accessed comments from relevant
authorities as its normal frequencies continue to be jammed.
b. Political
violence
BOTH
Studio 7 and SW Radio Africa carried eight reports on politically
motivated violence and intimidation of MDC activists by mainly ZANU
PF supporters. Six reports were on SW Radio Africa while the remaining
two were on Studio 7. Among SW Radio Africa's stories were reports
on the violence in Insiza perpetrated by ZANU PF supporters against
the MDC candidate for the constituency his polling agents. The station
also reported on the deployment of soldiers in Gwanda and Masvingo,
which it viewed as an attempt to intimidate the electorate.
In another story
SW Radio Africa reported that a South African national, who is part
of a church delegation that is in Harare for an Easter exchange
programme, was "indecently assaulted" by ZANU PF activists in Marondera.
The two reports that Studio 7 carried were on the assault of an
MDC driver in Greendale by ZANU PF activists and the intimidation
of opposition supporters in Insiza.
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