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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Murambatsvina
and the Bulawayo Election
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2005-30
Monday August 8th – Sunday August 14th 2005
THE government
media’s continuing reluctance to examine the disastrous effects
of government’s recent blitz on the urban poor was evident again
during the week.
For example,
all 14 stories ZBH carried on the subject were glowing portrayals
of Operation Garikai. However, no comprehensive evidence
was provided to back up the purported success of the reconstruction
programme.
Power FM (10/8,8pm)
epitomised such coverage. It reported, "government is
pleased with the progress of Operation Garikai in Lupane…despite
shortages of water, skilled personnel, fuel crisis,"
but failed to provide statistics and other details of the "progress."
The pattern
remained unbroken in the government Press.
Nine of the
11 stories these papers carried on the matter dutifully presented
the reconstruction programme as being achievable within government’s
August 31st deadline. The remaining two reports were
on the authorities’ justification of the military’s involvement
in Garikai and calls on police to "descend on
illegal vendors", The Herald (8 & 9/8).
For example,
The Sunday News unquestioningly quoted Charamba, pro-government
editor of New African magazine Baffour Ankomah and a member of an
obscure United States-based Towards an Africa Without Borders, Mukoma
wa Ngugi, all praising Garikai’s "progress"
during a tour of construction sites in Bulawayo. The only hindrance
to the programme, Charamba told the paper, were "minor
constraints caused by an erratic supply of building materials".
Power FM (12/8,
6am) and ZTV (13/8, 6pm) also quoted Ankomah and wa Ngugi raising
similar sentiments. The two’s comments, including those of ZANU
PF, the army and alternative voices, (see Fig 4) merely echoed government’s
opinion.
Fig. 4: Voice
distribution on ZBH
|
Govt
|
Local
Govt
|
ZANU
PF
|
Alternative
|
Foreign
Dignitaries
|
Defence
Forces
|
|
34
|
2
|
3
|
2
|
2
|
4
|
However, the
16 stories the private media carried on the topic (Studio 7 [9]
and the private Press [7] belied ZBH’s projections that Garikai
was progressing well.
The Standard
(14/8) claimed that the "completion of houses before
August 31 was impossible" as the reconstruction programme
was facing "a serious shortage of artisans, bricks, diesel
and other essentials". In addition, it revealed that
only 31 houses "were near completion" in
Bulawayo, while "more than 900 pegged stands remained
untouched".
The paper also
reported on a survey carried out by ActionAid International and
Combined Harare Residents’ Association to assess the devastation
caused by Murambatsvina in Harare, which revealed that more
than 90 percent of the people in Harare’s high-density suburbs were
affected by the purge.
In addition,
the paper reported visiting US Ambassador to the UN Agencies for
Food and Agriculture, Tony Hall, saying the blitz, which was "entirely
avoidable", had worsened Zimbabwe’s "desperate"
food situation. Hall noted that victims of the operation were "hungry"
and "don’t have enough to keep themselves warm".
Studio 7 aired
six reports that conveyed similar sentiments. Two of them exposed
how government was frustrating South African churches from helping
Murambatsvina victims with food and other materials. As a
result, said Studio 7 (10/8), the SA church leaders had asked Mbeki
to intervene. The Standard and Independent reported
on the matter too.
Studio 7 (9/8)
also cited an unnamed UN special investigator accusing the government
of continuing to evict the poor from slum dwellings despite "a
UN report condemning such evictions and statements from Harare that
it has stopped the operation". The government media
ignored these issues.
The Independent
highlighted that, contrary to the official dismissal of the UN’s
report on Murambatsvina, the High Court had affirmed some
of its findings when it ruled on August 2 that police conduct during
the purge in Bulawayo was "unlawful". According
to the paper, the court ruled, "the confiscation and
seizure of goods from vendors interfered with individual’s property
rights".
It also quoted
the MDC claiming that Murambatsvina had displaced many supporters,
which would erode its support base in the Bulawayo mayoral election.
The story was
one of only six reports carried by the private media on the election.
The others comprised a Standard report on voter apathy, Studio
7’s two campaign stories featuring both ZANU PF and the MDC, and
another report announcing the election result, won by the incumbent
MDC mayor, Japhet Ndabeni-Ncube.
The government
media carried more stories with ZBH broadcasting 14 reports, while
the government papers carried six. However, this did not translate
into informative reports on the mechanics governing the poll.
Like the private
media, the official media did not carry any information on the state
of the voters’ roll or provide details on the location of polling
stations. Neither did they give logistics on the deployment of the
electoral staff, including the identity and number of election observers
and monitors that oversaw the poll.
However, Power
FM (11/8, 8pm & 12/8, 6am), the Chronicle (12/8) and
Independent reported on the arrest of 12 MDC youths allegedly
"for obstructing traffic and distributing campaigning
material to traffickers" (Power FM).
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sheet
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