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Food
security and agriculture
Media Monitoring
Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2005-17
Monday
9th 2005 - Sunday May 15th 2005
THE government media's hypocrisy in handling
problems besetting the country was also illustrated by the manner
in which they covered the country's food insecurity and the chaos
in the agricultural sector. For instance, while ZBH carried 44 reports
on the issues, these were mere highlights of the problems haunting
the agricultural sector, such as inadequate funding and inputs shortages.
No attempt was made to fully discuss the underlying implications
of the issues on the country's capability to produce sufficient
food.
For example, although all ZBH stations
(9/5, 8pm) disclosed that wheat farmers "have expressed concern
over the delays by Agribank to disburse $600 billion meant for the
winter wheat programme," they avoided discussing the effects of
such delays on the country's wheat yield. Their dishonesty also
resulted in Power FM (12/5, 6pm), Radio Zimbabwe
(13/5,6am) and ZTV (13/5,8pm) conveniently
dodging the main reason why milk production had dropped from 383
million litres between 1994 and 2004 to the current 85 million litres.
Instead, ZTV narrowly attributed the decline to "the prevailing
difficult economic circumstances" such as the shortage of foreign
currency.
Although the government papers published
24 reports exposing the pangs of distress the agricultural sector
was facing, like ZBH, these were merely reported in isolation of
the general decline in the agricultural sector that has taken place
since government embarked on its controversial land reforms in 2000.
Their failure to qualitatively examine the matter was mainly due
to the papers' over-dependence on official pronouncements, leaving
little room for independent verification. Fourteen stories (58%)
out of the 24 stories the papers carried on the subject illustrated
this trend.
For example, The Sunday Mail (15/5) story,
Government in bid to avert starvation, failed to establish how the
authorities would adequately ensure the survival of those threatened
with famine. Instead, it passively allowed Grain Marketing Board
boss Samuel Muvuti to gloss over the threat of hunger in the country
by giving paltry and meaningless statistics that did not factor
in the exact national requirements of those needing food relief.
Moreover, the paper allowed Muvuti to avoid explaining the total
shortfall of grain his board needed to import to stave off acute
nationwide shortage of the commodity by using the lame excuse that
it was a "security" matter.
However, in a rare moment of professional
brilliance a comment in The Herald (10/5)
took to task the GMB's decision to buy 36 million empty maize bags
worth $144 billion for farmers this season. The paper believed that
the money, which it said could buy 64 056 tonnes of maize, was "just
too much money to spend on empty grain bags when most parts of the
country are facing food shortages", adding that, "with a significantly
reduced yield due to the severe drought, we do not believe farmers
need $144 billion worth of grain bags to deliver their maize to
the GMB."
The Herald comment might as well have
aptly reflected the critical nature of most of the 21 stories the
private media carried on the agriculture and food security. Thirteen
were on private radio stations and the remaining eight appeared
in the private papers. The stories continued to mainly belie the
façade of well-being the authorities continue to paint in
the agricultural sector and exposed the magnitude of food shortages
in the country. For example, SW Radio Africa (9/5)
reported that government's land officers continued to harass the
few remaining white farmers in the Lowveld and that government was
also planning to seize farming equipment belonging to the farmers
in the same area.
The Standard (15/5) revealed that there
was hardly enough maize at the GMB depot in Bulawayo to cater for
increasing demand. It reported that haulage truck drivers were spending
nights at the depot in the hope of getting maize but to no avail.
Although the paper said it was unable to get comment from the GMB
on the shortages, it however quoted ZANU PF MP for Beitbridge Kembo
Mohadi saying thousands of villagers in constituency needed food
aid. Similar stories appeared on Studio 7, SW Radio Africa, the
Independent and The Daily Mirror (10/5). In fact, SW Radio Africa
(9/5) and Studio 7 (9/5) reported that the country's precarious
food situation had attracted the attention of UN Secretary General
Kofi Annan who had discussed the issue with President Mugabe and
expressed his plans to send an envoy to assess the situation. The
government media ignored such stories.
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