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The
IMF debt
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2005-33
Monday August 29th – Sunday September 4th
2005
THE media, particularly
the government-controlled ones, generally failed to report holistically
on Zimbabwe’s partial payment of its overdue arrears to the IMF
or its general indebtedness to other international institutions
in the 46 stories they carried on the topic.
The bulk of
the stories appeared in the broadcast media, with ZBH carrying 25,
while four featured on Studio 7. The government Press carried nine
reports and the private papers had eight.
Although ZBH
carried most of the reports, it hardly provided analytical detail
on the matter. Rather, the government broadcaster, as illustrated
by ZTV (31/9 8pm), simplistically hailed government’s payment of
US$120 million out of the US$295 million it owes the IMF as a "source
of immense national pride", which demonstrated the
country’s "unwavering commitment" to servicing
its debt and engaging the international community in its economic
turnaround programme.
Despite quoting
the central bank as having said the "modest effort by
Zimbabwe" to settle part of its debt "does
not in any way nullify" the ongoing negotiations over
a US$1 billion loan the country was seeking from South Africa, ZTV
did not question the authorities on why the repayment had taken
so long to be made if government was "committed" to servicing
its debt, or how they had raised the money from our "own
resources".
Instead, ZBH
stations (1/9, main bulletins) passively quoted Finance Minister
Herbert Murerwa claiming that government has always been committed
to settling its debt as illustrated by the fact that it has, since
1980, paid its arrears including those "accrued by the
colonial regime". There was no attempt to establish
the veracity of Murerwa’s claims. Rather, ZTV allowed National Economic
Consultative Forum official Nicholas Kitikiti to conjure up a conspiracy
theory that if Zimbabwe was expelled from the IMF, following the
part payment, "it will not be because the country is
failing to honour its obligations" but because of "political
objectives, which are being sought" through the "US’s
so-called Zimbabwe Freedom and Democracy Act". But
how the threat of the country’s expulsion from the IMF and the US’s
Zimbabwe Democracy Act were linked remained a mystery.
The government
Press’s nine stories were equally uncritical.
For instance,
although The Herald (1/9) and The Sunday Mail (4/9)
interviewed RBZ governor Gideon Gono, they hardly used the opportunity
to obtain a clearer picture on why Zimbabwe had been failing to
pay its arrears to the institution from February 2001 until March
2004, or name the "exporters and free fund holders"
that the authorities got the money from.
Instead, they
allowed themselves to be drowned in Gono’s florid, evasive and officious
explanations. For example, instead of setting the record straight
publicly on who exactly provided the funds used to offset the IMF
balance of payments, The Sunday Mail only quoted him: "…I
challenge anyone who has got an interest to know how we accumulated
this money to come and have a cup of tea and I will be able to show
them."
The government
media’s passive handling of the topic was reflected by its reliance
on official voices and pro-government commentators as exemplified
by ZBH’s sourcing pattern. See Fig 3.
Fig 3 Voice
distribution on ZBH
|
Govt
|
Alternative
|
Business
|
IMF
|
|
6
|
7
|
2
|
2
|
Apart from the
IMF voices, all the sources the government broadcaster accessed
toed the official line.
While the official
media did not expose government’s source of funds, the private media,
as illustrated by Studio 7 (1/9) and the Independent (2/9),
revealed that Gono had paid the IMF through liquidating foreign
accounts owned by corporate organizations.
In addition,
Studio 7 (2/9) noted that, contrary to the notion created by the
government media, Zimbabwe’s membership with the IMF was still under
threat despite the part payment. It quoted economist Godfrey Kanyeze
saying Zimbabwe could still be expelled because it had not "really
met all its obligations".
The Sunday
Mirror (4/9) echoed similar views.
The Independent
quoted analysts cautioning that the debt repayment "would
not open the floodgates for Harare to access funds from the IMF
and the World Bank." They noted that Zimbabwe’s economic
problems would remain despite the payment because no new balance
of payments, lines of credit, or direct foreign investment would
flow in as a result of the payment.
It argued that
until Zimbabwe "makes political reforms, abandons human
rights violations… and unsustainable economic policies…the IMF,
WB, WTO (World Trade Organisation) and Nepad, among others, would
not assist the country."
Kanyeze made
similar observations on Studio 7 (2/9).
Visit the MMPZ
fact sheet
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