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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Municipal
Issues and Police clampdown
Media Monitoring
Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly
Media Update 2005-18
Monday May 16th - Sunday May 22nd 2005
THE government-controlled
media's professionally passive role also manifested itself in the
way they failed to question the heavy-handed manner in which the
police violently evicted vendors and flea market operators in Harare,
Bulawayo and Chitungwiza, ostensibly to weed out economic crimes.
As a result,
none of the 27 stories carried by ZBH or the seven published by
the official Press on the subject hardly captured the element of
rights abuses committed during the operation, or why government
was now acting against informal economic activity after allowing
it to flourish for so long. ZBH only mentioned the violent nature
of the "clean-up" when, for example, Radio Zimbabwe (21/5, 6 am)
cursorily reported that government "has expressed concern over the
stoning of three ZUPCO buses by Chitungwiza residents". No reasons
for stoning the buses were given.
Instead, 25
(93%) of the ZBH stories appeared to justify the violent clean-up.
For example, ZTV (20/5, 8pm) reported "some Harare residents" as
having "commended" the government-appointed commission running the
city council "for ridding the city of unscrupulous foreign currency
dealers, unlicensed flea market operators and drug dealers." ZBH's
narrow portrayal of the matter was also mirrored in its continuing
dependence on official explanations for the clampdown as illustrated
in Fig 1.
Notably, none of the victims of the raids were quoted.
Fig 1 Voice
distribution on ZBH
|
Station
|
Government
|
Police
|
Local
Gvt
|
Povo |
Alternative |
Reader |
|
ZTV
|
2
|
4
|
1
|
4 |
0 |
0 |
|
Radio
Zimbabwe
|
3
|
3
|
1
|
0 |
0 |
2 |
|
Power
FM
|
1
|
2
|
0
|
0 |
0 |
5 |
Except for one
story in The Sunday Mail, which quoted six informal traders highlighting
their plight, the rest of the stories the government Press carried
on the matter also just regurgitated official justification for
the crackdown. For example, The Herald (21/5) passively quoted Small
and Medium Enterprises Minister Sithembiso Nyoni as saying the destruction
of flea markets had been "necessitated by the rise in criminal activities
in the informal sector". The police and Harare City Council Commission
chairperson Sekesai Makwavarara echoed these views.
A critical analysis
of the issue only appeared in 16 stories published by the private
media. Eight of these appeared on Studio 7, six in the Mirror stable
and the rest in The Standard. The reports either exposed the brutal
manner in which the police handled the issue or condemned the alleged
clean up exercise.
For example,
two of the stories carried by Studio 7 recorded two incidents of
rights abuses committed against a journalist, vendors and flea market
operators by the police. In one, the station (20/5) reported the
arrest of freelance journalist Frank Chikowore for filming the police
raids in Harare. It claimed the journalist was beaten and held overnight
by police without charge, and quoted the New York-based Committee
for the Protection of Journalists (CPJ) and the Media Institute
of Southern Africa (MISA) condemning the arrest. The public media
censored the incident.
The same bulletin
also revealed that the Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights was "investigating
a number of cases in which vendors were detained or beaten or had
their goods confiscated." In addition The Standard reported that
"frustrated" residents of Chitungwiza had "fought running battles"
with police following the demolition of tuck-shops and the confiscation
of goods from vendors. Reportedly, the ensuing melee resulted in
the stoning of a commuter omnibus belonging to a government-controlled
bus company and a supermarket. The Herald (21/5) also reported on
the skirmishes in Chitungwiza but buried them in its story, Police
blitz expands countrywide.
Meanwhile, in
another case of rights abuse Studio 7 (20/5) and The Standard reported
that about 300 villagers from Silalatshani in Filabusi had been
arrested for demanding that their chief address them on government's
food relief plans as they were facing starvation. And in a related
incident, The Standard reported on the politicisation of food in
Mwenezi where traditional leaders were reportedly denying suspected
MDC supporters food aid.
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fact sheet
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