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Political
developments
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2005-26
Monday Jul 11th – Sunday July 17th 2005
DURING the week
media attention was drawn to renewed regional pressure aimed at
prodding ZANU PF and the MDC to engage in dialogue and resolve the
country’s continuing political and economic crises.
The electronic
media broadcast 42 stories on the topic and other related political
developments. Of these, 28 were aired on ZBH (ZTV [13], Power FM
[8] and Radio Zimbabwe [7]) and 14 on Studio 7. The Press carried
40 stories on the matter, 19 of which appeared in the government
papers and 21 in the private Press.
While the government
media simply recorded or amplified officials’ dismissal of prospective
talks between the two parties, the private Press interpreted the
developments as part of regional leaders’ attempts to find a lasting
solution to the Zimbabwean crisis.
The private
papers linked the sudden visit to Zimbabwe by South African Vice-President
Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka to such regional initiatives. But the government
media steered clear of these interpretations, opting instead to
view Ngcuka’s visit merely as a "courtesy call"
on President Mugabe and his deputy Joice Mujuru.
ZTV (12/7, 8pm),
The Herald and Chronicle (13/7) failed to go beyond
Ngcuka’s diplomatic etiquette and unravel the real purpose of her
meeting with President Mugabe and Mujuru. ZTV and The Herald
passively quoted her saying her visit to Zimbabwe stemmed from her
desire to "to understand the challenges in Zimbabwe".
ZBH also obscured
the fact that Nigerian President and chairman of the African Union,
Olusegun Obasanjo, had embarked on a fresh effort to re-open dialogue
between ZANU PF and the MDC. Instead, the national public broadcaster
carried five stories, which largely recorded government officials
rebutting such plans.
For example,
ZTV (15/7, 8pm) quoted President Mugabe saying there was "no
way" his party could talk to the MDC because it was
a "British creature" and "lacked
the spirit of nationalism".
Coverage of
efforts to revive the talks in The Herald (13/7) and
Chronicle (15/7) were equally dismissive. The Herald,
for example, trashed such calls as "ill-advised and mischievous
as they imply that Zimbabwe is a failed state where all institutions
of dialogue have ceased to exist". It argued that calls were
not "genuine" but "aimed at raising
the profiles" of Obasanjo and Tsvangirai and "not
the national interest".
Despite the
official denials of the potential revival of the ZANU PF/MDC talks,
Studio 7 (11/7) carried confirmation from Obasanjo’s office that
both President Mugabe and Tsvangirai had certainly "discussed
the matter" with the Nigerian leader and agreed to
meet in Harare. No timetable was set.
Besides Obasanjo’s
efforts to push for an internal settlement, the Zimbabwe Independent
(15/7) quoted unnamed sources as saying Ngcuka’s visit to Zimbabwe
was part of a new effort by President Thabo Mbeki to revive talks
between the two parties as a "follow-up"
to the meeting "between Mbeki and Mugabe…in Libya over
the issue".
The Sunday
Mirror (17/7) concurred in its story, Mbeki in fresh bid
over Zim.
Earlier, The
Financial Gazette (14/7) had also linked Ngcuka’s visit to the
revival of the talks agenda. But while the paper’s headline gave
the impression that Mbeki had pledged to "get tough on
Zimbabwe", there was no evidence to substantiate this.
In addition,
The Standard (17/7) reported that there was mounting pressure on
the region to take decisive action on Zimbabwe. The paper reported
that the EU had come up with a "raft of resolutions"
on Harare, including plans to appoint a special envoy for Zimbabwe
"in order to galvanise action among African states".
However,
the media failed to investigate the point for calling for the
talks, especially when these had failed before. They also failed
to investigate the agenda for the proposed dialogue.
Notably, while
The Herald’s docile story (16/7) quoted President Mugabe
dismissing the need for talks because there was "no problem
in Zimbabwe except that the United States and Britain wanted to
destabilise the country", the Gazette and Independent
reported that Zimbabwe’s worsening economic crisis was causing unrest
even in ZANU PF. The Gazette reported that Cabinet was divided
on how to resolve the fuel crisis while the Independent revealed
that ZANU PF MPs had "staged a revolt" over
government’s failure to resolve the issue.
The Herald
and Chronicle (15/7) censored these developments and only
reported that government had given the green light to individuals
with foreign currency to import fuel to arrest the shortages.
Contrary to
President Mugabe’s sanitised picture of the situation in Zimbabwe,
all media carried a total of 92 reports that pointed to a deepening
economic crisis characterised by sharp increases in commodity and
service prices, including a 20% rise in inflation from 144,2% in
May to 164,3% in June.
In fact, Studio
7 (17/7) cited South Africa’s City Press alleging that the
Zimbabwean government was seeking a US$1 billion loan from South
Africa to finance food and fuel purchases and loan repayments to
the IMF to stave off expulsion. This startling news appeared nowhere
in the Zimbabwean media.
But while the
media preoccupied itself with the talks issue, they ignored the
significance of Mugabe’s sudden resumption of his nationwide tours.
For example, although the government broadcaster carried four stories
on President Mugabe’s tour of Mashonaland Central, Mashonaland West
and Matebeleland North where he donated a total of 500 computers
to 50 different schools, it did not explore the underlying purpose
for his visits.
Similarly, except
for Studio 7 and the Mirror stable, the rest of the media
have been reticent about exploring the MDC’s internal squabbles
and subsequent paralysis. For example, only The Daily Mirror
(14/7) followed up the story of the power struggle gripping the
party – a topic the paper has enthusiastically covered in past weeks
– and reported that Tsvangirai had dissolved his shadow Cabinet
as part of his attempts to "patch up cracks"
in the MDC.
The Sunday
Mirror quoted MDC spokesman Paul Themba Nyathi confirming the
party infighting.
The government
media made reference to the matter in six stories, which included
one quoting former MDC MP Roy Bennet accusing "corrupt
opportunists" of hijacking the party and Tsvangirai’s
response to the allegations. To its credit, The Herald (16/7)
carried an interview with MDC secretary-general Welshman Ncube who
was allowed to articulate his party’s agenda and respond to allegations
levelled against the opposition.
Although, the
government media quoted the MDC as shown in Fig. 1 and 2, they were
mostly quoted in negative stories about the party. Otherwise, the
rest of its local sources and four editorials carried by the official
Press parroted government’s position on talks.
Fig 1. Voice
distribution for Public Press
|
Alternative
|
Government
|
MDC
|
Unnamed
|
Foreign
|
|
3
|
7
|
9
|
1
|
4
|
Fig 2. Voice
distribution on ZBH
|
MDC
|
Foreign
Diplomats
|
Govt
|
Alternative
|
Reporter/Reader
|
|
7
|
4
|
10
|
1
|
3
|
Despite the
private media’s stories on the country’s political developments
being more revealing, they relied too heavily on MDC comments as
shown in Fig. 3 and 4. Most of the foreign voices were officials
confirming regional leaders’ moves to revive talks between the MDC
and ZANU PF.
Fig 3. Voice
distribution in the private Press
|
Alternative
|
ZANU
(PF)
|
Government
|
MDC
|
Unnamed
|
Foreign
|
|
7
|
1
|
5
|
13
|
5
|
13
|
Fig 4. Voice
distribution on Studio 7
|
MDC
|
Foreign
Diplomats
|
Govt
|
Alternative
|
Ordinary
People
|
|
7
|
3
|
2
|
5
|
1
|
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