|
Back to Index
Food
security
Media Monitoring
Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2005-19
Monday May 23rd - Sunday May 29th 2005
THOSE who rely
on the government-controlled broadcaster for information still have
no idea about the reality of the country's precarious food situation.
ZBH continues to ignore or downplay the widespread threat of famine.
For instance, the broadcaster merely carried 13 stories that presented
a glowing picture of the agricultural sector. In one of the stories,
ZTV (24/5, 6pm & 8pm) simply reported that the country was expecting
to reap 40,000 tonnes of soya beans without explaining how that
would assist the country in alleviating starvation.
The government
Press also evaded open debate on the exact state of the country's
food security position. These papers carried 11 reports, which typically
downplayed the extent of food shortages while commending government's
renewed efforts to import grain to mitigate the effects of the drought,
their sole cause for Zimbabwe's food scarcity. The Herald (23/05)
for example passively reported on government importing
150,000 tonnes
of maize "since the beginning of the year" as a demonstration of
its commitment to staving off nationwide starvation without giving
a clue as to whether the rate at which grain was being imported
matched national consumption. Neither did it quantify the exact
daily tonnage of maize that the government run Grain Marketing Board
(GMB) said was being delivered to the country "on a daily basis".
Instead, the
paper simply flooded its readers with figures of satellite depots
that government has established in "affected" areas to ease accessibility
by hungry Zimbabweans without giving a breakdown of the tonnage
of maize reaching the 207 depots. The Sunday Mail also tried to
pre-empt the food assessment mission by World Food Programme senior
official James Morris by claiming that the international community
had tried to force him to politicise his visit to Zimbabwe. The
paper's political editor Munyaradzi Huni urged Morris not to ask
"political" questions about Zimbabwe's food problems but "just focus
on your humanitarian job" and realise that he was "not dealing with
a leader who is clueless on how to find a solution to problems facing
his country".
Typically, the
private media presented a different perspective on the country's
precarious food situation and Morris' visit in the 16 stories they
carried on the matter. Twelve were in the private Press while the
remaining four were on Studio 7. For instance, the Independent actually
revealed that Morris was expected to quiz President Mugabe over
his government's failure to submit a consolidated aid appeal in
the face of a worsening food crisis. The paper noted that Morris
had, on five occasions, tried to persuade Mugabe to change his economic
policies and remove bureaucratic obstacles to food output and distribution
without success.
In addition,
the paper, Studio 7 (24/5), The Daily Mirror and the Financial Gazette
(27/5) reported on the scientific findings by two reputable international
organisations, which painted a grim picture of Zimbabwe's food security.
One of the reports, released by the Famine Early Warning System
(FEWSNET), predicted
that Zimbabwe would find it "an enormous challenge" to raise funds
for sufficient food imports during the April 2005 - March 2006 consumption
year as other requirements like fuel and electricity continue to
put a strain on limited foreign currency resources.
The other study,
funded by Britain's Department for International Development, contradicted
government claims that drought rather than the authorities' critical
policy errors, especially the fast-track land reforms, were the
main causes behind Zimbabwe's current food and nutrition insecurity.
The broad approach taken by the private Press was aptly demonstrated
in way it sourced diverse comment from various interest groups as
Fig 1 shows.
Fig 1 Voice
distribution in the Private Press
|
Alternative
|
Government
|
MDC |
Ordinary
people
|
Local
Government
|
Foreign
diplomats
|
Police
|
|
7
|
4
|
2
|
5
|
3
|
2
|
4
|
This contrasted
sharply (see Fig 2) with the manner the government-controlled papers
presented their stories.
Fig 6 Government-controlled
Press' sourcing pattern
|
Government
|
Local
Government |
Ordinary
people
|
Traditional
leaders
|
|
7
|
2
|
1
|
1
|
Notably, nine
(82%) of the 11 voices these papers sourced echoed the official
line, which showed that their stories were poorly balanced.
Visit the MMPZ
fact sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|