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Police
clampdown
Media Monitoring
Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2005-19
Monday May 23rd - Sunday May 29th 2005
THE intensification
of government's clean-up exercise - purportedly to rid the cities
of criminals, illegal dealers, touts, flea market operators and
illegal settlements - was reflected in the way it dominated the
media during the week. The print media carried a total of 62 stories
on the development, 30 of which appeared in the government-controlled
Press and 32 in the private papers.
ZBH carried
110 stories (56 of them on ZTV) while Studio 7 broadcast 18 stories.
Although ZBH carried most of the reports on the exercise this did
not translate into a critical examination of the issue. Rather,
almost all its reports took a partisan slant echoing the authorities'
justification for their violent clampdown on informal traders and
illegal settlements. As a result, the broadcaster failed to give
a holistic picture of the human suffering caused by the exercise.
Neither did it relate the growth of the informal sector and illegal
settlements to the country's critical economic condition nor fully
discuss the effects of the crackdown on the welfare of the victims.
Most particularly
the government media avoided questioning whether it was legal for
the police to order people to demolish their own homesteads at the
point of a gun. For example, in only two reports - on Power FM (24/5,
8pm) and ZTV (26/5,
8pm) did ZBH
fleetingly link the expansion of the informal sector to high levels
of unemployment. Otherwise, the rest seemingly approved of the government
action and even ironically tried to present it as sympathetic to
the people's plight. Power FM (27/5, 1pm) and ZTV (27/5, 8pm), for
example, reported Local Government Minister Ignatius Chombo as having
handed over a vending complex with 400 stalls to informal traders.
This, according to Chombo, showed that "government is concerned
about its citizens" and would "strive to house them in modern buildings".
The government
Press' stories were cut from the same cloth. The official papers
failed to measure the advantages of the government's blitz to cleanse
the country of lawlessness against the social, political and economic
ramifications of the exercise. Rather, they seemed to subordinate
the colossal human suffering of the victims to the purported virtues
of the operation. This was summed up by The Herald (23/5), whose
editorial argued that it was better for families to be "prejudiced
of income by the on-going blitz...than the nation as we should never
compromise the national interest on the altar of economic expediency".
The Herald comment
was one of seven editorials that were used by the government-controlled
Press to justify official opinion on the purported dignity of the
operation. Their partisan stance was also mirrored by the way these
papers relied on government and police voices at the expense of
independent commentators as shown in Fig 1.
Fig 1 Voice
distribution in the government-controlled Press
|
Government
|
Local
Government
|
Ordinary
people |
Police
|
Alternative
|
MDC
|
ZANU
PF
|
|
14
|
6
|
17
|
23
|
1
|
0
|
1
|
The official
papers' dependence on official comment to shape their editorial
agenda resulted in The Sunday Mail (29/5) justifying the clampdown
on the basis that "the fact that the President has thrown his weight
behind the clean-up exercise" meant it was " a well-thought programme."
Notably, although
most members of the public - including the victims of the blitz
- were cited as "welcoming" this unprecedented assault on Zimbabwe's
urban population, they were actually quoted raising concerns about
the manner in which they were evicted from their business and residential
premises without recourse.
Although ZBH
tried to seek comment from a wide range of sources as Fig. 2 shows,
its tone remained biased in favour of government's actions. For
instance, while ZBH displayed a rare moment of professionalism by
balancing comments from members of the public, who condemned the
'clean-up' with those that were for the action, the reporters' narratives
were largely in support of government.
Fig. 2 Voice
distribution on ZBH
|
Station
|
Government
|
Alternative
|
Local
Gvt
|
Police |
Ordinary
people |
Professional |
Business |
Reader |
|
ZTV
|
24
|
7
|
6
|
16 |
69 |
4 |
3 |
0 |
|
Power
FM
|
11
|
0
|
3
|
11 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
7 |
|
Radio
Zimbabwe
|
6
|
1
|
2
|
8 |
0 |
4 |
0 |
0 |
|
Total
|
41
|
8
|
11
|
35 |
69 |
9 |
4 |
7 |
The government
media's supine coverage also resulted in their failure to expose
policy contradictions that characterized the operation. For example,
while The Herald (24/5) reported Harare City Council as giving a
three-month ultimatum to property owners to either demolish their
shacks, "illegal" extensions and tuck shops or legalise them, the
next day the paper (25/5) reported the police as having demolished
the same tuck shops, among other structures, in three Harare high
density suburbs.
Similarly, ZBH
failed to reconcile Chombo's statements on ZTV's Face The Nation
programme (26/5, 9.30pm) that government would give the public "June
and July" as notice to legalise their structures with the destruction
of some of the dwellings the following morning. The extent of the
massive humanitarian disaster caused by the exercise was only revealed
in the private media, which criticized government's actions.
The private
papers carried a total of 20 news reports and 12 editorials on the
issue while Studio 7 had 18 stories. SW Radio Africa also carried
extensive and alarming reports (26 &27/5). Unlike the government-controlled
media, the private Press balanced official opinion with alternative
views sought from civic and political groups as illustrated in Fig
3.
Fig 3 Voice
distribution in the private Press
|
Government
|
Local
Government
|
Ordinary
people |
Police
|
Alternative
|
MDC
|
ZANU
PF
|
|
8
|
5
|
12
|
6
|
11
|
5
|
1
|
Although Studio
7 largely carried anti-clampdown comments it balanced this with
pro-government sentiments from the police and ruling party. See
Fig 4
Fig. 4 Voice
distribution on Studio 7
|
Voice
|
Total
|
|
Ordinary
people
|
10
|
|
Police
|
1
|
|
Alternative
|
5
|
|
MDC
|
5
|
|
ZANU PF
|
2
|
|
Business
|
3
|
|
Foreign
|
2
|
|
War veteran
|
2
|
|
Lawyers
|
2
|
SW Radio Africa
(27/5) also tried to balance its reports by seeking comment from
government officials and the police, who were hostile towards the
station.
Contrary to
the impression in the official papers that victims of the blitz
endorsed the operation, those quoted in the private media were angry.
The Zimbabwe Independent (27/5) story, Flea market traders face
bleak future, which depicted the uncertainties facing former flea-market
operators, summed up the hopelessness and indignation of victims
quoted in the private media. Political and civic groups such as
the MDC, the Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR), The Zimbabwe
National Pastors' Conference (ZNPC), The Catholic Commission for
Justice and Peace (CCJP) and Human Rights Trust of Southern Africa
(SAHRIT) who were given platforms in at least seven stories carried
in the private Press to air their views.
For example,
The Standard (29/5) devoted its front-page story to highlighting
the civic society's concerns, saying law enforcement agencies had
been very "provocative, offensive and unsympathetic" to the affected
people. Likewise, Studio 7 quoted five independent commentators
raising similar views. For example, it (25/5) quoted a member of
the Combined Harare Residents Association Legal Committee Dewa Mavhinga
saying it was "immoral" and "illegal" for council "to evict people
without due notice".
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