|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Purge
of the urban poor continues
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2005-22
Monday
June 13th – Sunday June 19th 2005
THE government’s
continued clampdown on the urban poor under its Operation Murambatsvina
continued to dominate the media. The newspapers carried 59 stories
on the matter, 31 of which appeared in the government-controlled
Press and 28 in the private Press. The electronic media carried
99 stories. Of these, 64 appeared on ZBH (ZTV (38), Power FM (13)
and Radio Zimbabwe (13) while Studio 7 carried 35 stories.
Although the
stories generally pointed to a continuation of the severe social
upheaval resulting from the exercise, all the stories from the government
media unquestioningly endorsed it. Only private media reported on
local and international condemnation of the programme, and exposed
the brutal and inhumane nature of the "clearances".
The passive
nature of the official media’s coverage was illustrated by the way
in which they only echoed or amplified government’s justification
for the ‘clean-up’ by mainly depicting the authorities as working
flat out to ensure that no one was disadvantaged by the operation.
This unquestioning approval of the crackdown saw Power FM (13/6,
1pm), ZTV (13/6,6pm) and the Chronicle (14/6) using officials
from the Zimbabwe Institute of Regional and Urban Planners (ZIRUP)
and the Urban Councils’ Association of Zimbabwe (UCAZ) to suffocate
the real scale of the human suffering caused by Operation Murambatsvina
with fatuous comments.
For example,
ZTV merely quoted ZIRUP’s Percy Toriro urging "environmental
stakeholders to maintain the glow that has been awarded to cities
by the clean-up exercise" without linking it to the
humanitarian misery it has caused.
Similarly, the
Chronicle quoted UCAZ president Fani Phiri defending the
denial of shelter and "survival means" of
the victims because the clampdown was like a "bitter
medicine that healed the people".
But it was comment
from Police Commissioner Augustine Chihuri that best illustrated
the authorities’ contempt for the victims of Murambatsvina.
He was quoted in The Herald (16/6) describing them as the
"crawling mass of maggots" that were "bent
on destroying the economy".
To justify the
government’s harsh execution of the clampdown, The Herald (15/6)
handily used an isolated incident in which "80 pigs and 120
goats" were discovered in one of the ‘illegal’ houses in Harare
during the operation as "testimony to the extent to which our
cities had deteriorated". In addition, the government-controlled
papers carried nine stories – exposing alleged black market dealings
in gold, fuel and several other commodities – as proof of the benefits
of the crackdown.
The official
media also portrayed government as caring for the victims’ plight
by providing alternative accommodation. For example, ZTV (15/6,6pm)
and Power FM (16/6) quoted Local Government Minister Ignatius Chombo
announcing that 30 000 stands were "awaiting allocation
to those without homes", adding that the names of the
beneficiaries would be published in The Herald on Friday
(17/6).
The Herald
(17/6) itself was unhelpful. It passively reported that government
had named 4 470 people out of 20 477 who would be allocated housing
stands at Whitecliff Farm without questioning the criteria used
to select the beneficiaries, or even whether they had been victims
of the evictions. Nor did it provide any information about the stands
except to say that the beneficiaries would only be allowed to occupy
them once "basic services are put in place and until
they are issued with a certificate of occupation".
The Herald did not ask how long this might take or
why the authorities had not first serviced the stands and allowed
the beneficiaries to build homes before flattening their existing
dwellings.
ZTV (15/6, 8pm)
and the Chronicle (18/6) also steered clear of asking pertinent
questions.
Only the private
Press reported estimates of between 200,000 and a million people
who had lost their homes as a result of the clearances. Studio 7
(14/6) and The Financial Gazette (16/6) however, also quoted
Information Minister Tichaona Jokonya disputing these figures. The
Gazette quoted him as having said there "were
much less than 20,000" affected.
The official
media’s uncritical nature was illustrated by their reliance on the
authorities and pro-government commentators at the expense of other
pertinent sources. See Fig 1.
Fig. 1 Voice
distribution in the public Press
|
Alternative
|
Govt.
|
Ordinary
People
|
Police
|
Local
govt.
|
Business
|
Unnamed
|
|
2
|
8
|
14
|
15
|
7
|
1
|
4
|
All 51 sources
quoted by the official Press endorsed the operation. In addition,
they carried five editorials and opinion pieces that also approved
government’s action.
Similarly ZBH
relied more on government/officials as their primary sources of
news, quoting them 41 times, with only two from ordinary people.
However, except
for The Daily Mirror’s comment (17/6) supporting Operation Murambatsvina
and calling on government to extend it to illegal gold panners,
the rest of the 62 stories the private media carried continued to
expose the human suffering caused by the exercise. They also carried
local and international criticism from Australia, the US, the United
Nations, European Union, Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR),
health experts and church leaders.
The Standard
(19/6) also revealed that even some senior members of ZANU PF had
reservations about the operation. The government media dodged these
developments by maintaining its one-sided positive portrayal of
Murambatsvina.
For example,
ZTV (18/6,8pm) and Power FM (19/6, 6pm) announced that "efforts
to transform Caledonia Farm into a planned, structured and well
organized transit camp are now at an advanced stage"
without comparing how this squared with Chombo’s earlier comments
on ZTV (16/6, 6pm) that the exercise had been "conceived
and planned by government" after "elaborate
consultation" and "not initiated on the
spur of the moment".
Neither did
the station (16/6, 8pm) question why government was only now setting
up "committees to systematically execute resources to
people affected by the clean-up exercise".
Instead, Power
FM and ZTV (18/06,8pm) reported on families at Caledonia Farm now
having access to "clean water, better shelter and hygienic
conditions…"
ZTV showed footage
of the farm, where 13 small tents had been put up, with six big
ones still to be erected. A police officer was quoted saying the
people there were happy. None of the "residents" was interviewed
to comment on conditions at the farm.
The official
media ignored the public outcry arising from the purge. For example
it was silent on the outbreak of riots in Bulawayo’s Makokoba suburb
and the lawsuit brought against Chihuri by informal traders in Bulawayo
"over the confiscation of their merchandise"
as reported by Studio 7 (14/6 & 16/6) and the Independent.
In addition,
the Independent revealed that government had barred humanitarian
groups from assisting thousands of families who were affected by
the exercise because they feared that donors’ intervention would
be an acknowledgment of the humanitarian crisis the operation has
caused.
The critical
manner in which the private Press handled the operation was reflected
in their more diverse sourcing pattern as shown in Figs 3 and 4.
Fig. 2 Voice
distribution in the private Press
|
Voice
|
Total
|
|
Government
|
5
|
|
MDC
|
4
|
|
Police
|
7
|
|
Local
government
|
1
|
|
Alternative
|
13
|
|
Lawyer
|
1
|
|
Business
|
1
|
|
Foreign
|
3
|
|
Ordinary
people
|
16
|
|
Unnamed
|
3
|
Fig. 3 Voice
Distribution on Studio 7
|
Station
|
Government
|
ZRP
|
ZANU
PF
|
MDC
|
Reporter
|
Ordinary
People
|
|
Studio
7
|
4
|
1
|
0
|
6
|
6
|
22
|
The private
papers also carried four editorials and opinion pieces critical
of the exercise.
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
|