|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
The
purge of the poor and Operation Garikai
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2005-24
Monday June 27th – Sunday July 3rd 2005
GOVERNMENT’S
continued purge of the poor under Operation Murambatsvina
and its succeeding ‘reconstruction’ programme, Operation Garikai/Hlalani
Kuhle, dominated media coverage again during the week.
Government-controlled
newspapers published 35 stories on the topic and the private Press
41.
The electronic
media carried 147 stories. Of these, 120 were broadcast on ZBH (ZTV
53; Power FM 35; Radio Zimbabwe 32) while 27 were aired on Studio
7.
The government
media continued its passive coverage by merely echoing official
views on the matter, including an attempt to pre-empt the assessment
by UN special envoy Anna Tibaijuka of the humanitarian crisis triggered
by the government operation.
In contrast
the private papers exposed the chaotic and heavy-handed manner in
which Murambatsvina was implemented and publicised the growing
local and international condemnation of the exercise.
However, none
of the media adequately examined the details regarding the implementation
of Garikai and Murambatsvina, such as the laws government
is using to justify its actions, the credibility of its reconstruction
claims and where government will find the unbudgeted $3 trillion
it claims to have set aside to fund this massive exercise.
The media also
failed to demand the selection criteria for identifying the beneficiaries
of Garikai and have still made no attempt to investigate
the extent of the failure of urban councils to implement their housing
waiting-list system or whether any of the hundreds of thousands
of people allegedly on these lists will qualify as beneficiaries.
The government
media also blacked out incidents that exposed the callous nature
of government’s actions and its disregard for the rule of law. For
instance, they censored the brutal eviction of Porta Farm residents
despite court orders barring such actions and ignored government’s
illegal construction of "model" houses at Whitecliff Farm.
These issues – and reports of at least three deaths at Porta Farm
- only appeared in the private Press.
Instead, the
official media simply glossed over the widespread suffering caused
by Murambatsvina with the purported virtues of Garikai.
Twenty-two (63%) of the 35 reports the official Press carried on
the "winding-up" of Murambatsvina
and the launching of Garikai reflected this position, while
the rest were passive stories on Tibaijuka’s visit.
For example,
The Herald (29/6) supinely quoted Local Government Minister
Ignatius Chombo as having told Parliament that Murambatsvina
was "90 percent" successful, adding that
government was "now directing its efforts towards the
reconstruction of infrastructure throughout the country".
Chombo’s claims
that the authorities had given the public "adequate notices…advising
them not to construct illegal structures" or his assertion
that some shack owners had acknowledged their illegal conduct by
"pulling down the structures on their own" went
unchallenged.
The paper’s
reluctance to openly discuss the matter was reflected by the fact
that while it gave Chombo acres of space to defend Murambatsvina,
it suffocated the MDC questions he was responding to.
ZBH employed
similar reporting tactics with ZTV carrying 16 glowing stories on
the officials’ portrayal of Garikai and Murambatsvina
while reporting unflatteringly on alternative comment. For example,
ZTV (28/6, 8pm) manipulated British Prime Minister Tony Blair’s
alleged comments that he "welcomed" Tibaijuka’s
investigation into the effects of Murambatsvina because he
"personally" knew her to suggest that he
intended to influence her to produce a negative report.
However, the
same bulletin did not apply the same interpretation to Information
Minister Tichaona Jokonya’s statements that he perhaps knew Tibaijuka
"better" than Blair.
The Herald
and Chronicle (30/6) also reported on government’s attempts
to link Blair to Tibaijuka.
Nevertheless,
the following day The Herald (1/7) quoted Jokonya’s deputy,
Bright Matonga, saying the UN envoy would do her work without influence
from "the Zimbabwean government or from Blair".
This apparently followed a meeting between Tibaijuka and government
officials at which she reportedly hailed government’s "seriousness"
in allocating housing stands to the homeless.
Besides the
Tibaijuka issue, the government media also seemed bent on pre-empting
African Union envoy Bahare Tom Nyanduga’s planned evaluation of
Murambatsvina. For example, The Sunday Mail (3/7)
reported official suspicion of his "unprocedural"
visit, saying the AU dispatched him to Zimbabwe without
"notifying government through the normal channels".
However, Nyanduga told the paper that government had been informed
of his visit.
Studio 7 (1/7)
alerted its audiences to Nyanduga’s visit. The government media
ignored the issue. The failure by the official media to handle the
subject professionally was again reflected in their dependence on
official comment as shown on Fig 1 and 2.
Fig 1 Voice
distribution in the government Press
|
Govt.
|
Alternative
|
Professional
|
Local
govt.
|
Ordinary
people
|
Foreign
diplomats
|
Police
|
MDC
|
|
20
|
4
|
1
|
4
|
1
|
11
|
2
|
2
|
Notably, all
government, local government, police and alternative voices that
these papers quoted endorsed government’s policies. The 11 foreign
diplomats’ voices were mainly Tibaijuka’s comments while the MDC
was briefly quoted in the context of reports on parliamentary debates
on Murambatsvina. Even then, the opposition’s views were
drowned by government officials’ justification for the operation.
The pattern
remained unbroken on ZBH. For example, of the 179 comments recorded
on the State broadcaster 88 (49%) of them were official voices,
endorsing Murambatsvina. It was also notable that ZBH only
highlighted Tibaijuka’s alleged favourable comments on the exercise.
Fig. 2 Voice
distribution on ZBH
|
Foreign
Diplomats
|
Police
|
Alternative
|
Govt
|
Ordinary
People
|
Business
|
Local
Govt
|
Prof-
essional |
Reporter
|
ZANU
PF
|
MDC
|
|
23
|
6
|
12
|
73
|
31
|
6
|
9
|
10
|
3
|
5
|
1
|
In their efforts
to portray a positive picture of Garikai, the official media
ended up flooding their audiences with confusing statistics and
uninformative comments from the authorities. For example, while
the Chronicle (27/6) quoted Bulawayo governor Cain Mathema
claiming that about 600 houses would be delivered by August 31 under
Garikai, two days later it also reported the chairman of
the Bulawayo Reconstruction Committee, Lieutenant Colonel Brave
Matavire, putting them at 1 000.
In contrast,
almost all 41 stories carried by the private papers critically examined
government’s actions. Of these, 15 were on Tibaijuka’s visit and
questioned the practicability of government’s plan to provide all
displaced people with decent accommodation. The rest either continued
to condemn Murambatsvina or exposed the humanitarian crisis
it has caused.
Eight of the
27 stories carried by Studio 7 exposed government’s heavy-handed
implementation of Murambatsvina, 18 highlighted the international
community’s criticism of the exercise and the remainder was an update
on the continuing demolition of ‘illegal’ structures.
The Zimbabwe
Independent (1/7) viewed the government’s reconstruction exercise
as a ploy by the authorities to "mislead"
the UN and "cover up the disastrous impact of the crackdown".
The Sunday Mirror (3/7) agreed, saying government’s "damage
control overdrive" was being complemented by an "all-is-roses"
government "media blitz" to impress the
envoy.
The Financial Gazette (30/6) expressed similar sentiments.
The paper, The Daily Mirror, Studio 7 (30/6) and the Independent
also exposed the police’s brutal eviction of Porta Farm residents
in defiance of court orders barring them from doing so.
Similarly, The
Standard (3/7) reported government’s defiance of a court ruling
ordering it to destroy model houses it built at Whitecliff farm
"within 48 hours" because they were illegal.
This High Court ruling reported in the Independent barred
government from allocating stands at Whitecliff Farm and building
there because it was privately owned.
The government
media ignored this.
And contrary
to government media portrayals that Tibaijuka had been impressed
by government’s implementation of Murambatsvina, The
Standard reported her as having been "upset"
by what the victims of the exercise were experiencing, particularly
at Porta Farm. It also quoted the victims complaining to Tibaijuka
over the manner in which they were treated by the authorities.
In fact, the
extent of the disdain with which members of the ruling party view
the opposition MDC and their hundreds of thousands of urban supporters
was revealed in an alarming story in the Independent which
quoted Industry and Trade deputy minister and Seke MP Phineas Chihota
claiming in Parliament that the victims of Murambatsvina
who had no rural homes to go to were "not indigenous".
"Ninety
percent of our people who have been voted into Parliament from the
other side (MDC) are not indigenous and the constituencies they
talk about have no identity and recognition," the paper
quoted him as saying. The paper reported protests from all corners
of the House including Chihota’s ruling party colleagues. But it
also reported Zanu-PF "sources" saying the blitz on Zimbabwe’s
urban population was "a thinly veiled ethnic cleansing
campaign".
Only the British
Broadcasting Corporation carried a story similarly reflecting the
gravity of the crisis in Zimbabwe when it reported at the weekend
that Methodist churchmen had called on South African President Thabo
Mbeki to intervene because the unfolding tragedy contained all the
ingredients of "genocide".
Fig. 3 Voice
distribution in the private Press
|
Govt
|
Alternative
|
Foreign
diplomats
|
Business
|
Ordinary
people
|
|
15
|
9
|
18
|
7
|
16
|
The private
papers carried 11 editorials that also critically examined the operation.
Despite its diversified sourcing, Studio 7 remained thin on comment
from the authorities. The only official voice the station recorded
(30/6) was that of Matonga, attacking US President George Bush for
criticising President Mugabe as a "tyrant".
Fig. 4 Voice
distribution on Studio 7
|
Foreign
Diplomats
|
Local
Govt
|
Alternative
|
Ordinary
People
|
Lawyers
|
Govt
|
Reporter
|
MDC
|
|
12
|
1
|
8
|
13
|
2
|
1
|
13
|
1
|
The rest of
the voices were critical of Murambatsvina.
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
|