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Abuse of publicly funded media
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2005-34
Monday September 5th – Sunday September 11th 2005

THIS week The Financial Gazette (8/9) exposed the extent to which the authorities have abused the publicly funded media to fight personal wars when it unravelled the reasons behind the surprise vicious attack on Lovemore Mataire, editor of ZANU PF’s party paper, The Voice, by The Herald’s vituperative columnist, Nathaniel Manheru.

According to the weekly, the attack by Manheru (The Herald 3/9), whose puerile weekly instalments are notable for their vilification of government critics, was part of the behind-the-scenes struggle between Secretary for Information George Charamba and ZANU PF’s head of information, Nathan Shamuyarira, over control of the public media that had "spilt" into the public domain.

The fight between the two, the Gazette revealed, stems from "irreconcilable differences" over the "impending overhaul at state media institutions", especially ZBH. While Shamuyarira was allegedly advocating the reinstatement of experienced broadcasters kicked out by former Information Minister Jonathan Moyo, Charamba was "pushing for reorganisation with minimal upheaval".

Reportedly, Charamba, whom Moyo has claimed is the author of the Manheru column, was using The Herald to hit back at Mataire, who falls directly under Shamuyarira’s supervision, for allegedly reporting that his department "abused public funds".

The Zimbabwe Independent (9/9) carried a similar report and revealed that ruling party leaders had expressed concern over Charamba’s abuse of The Herald to attack those he disagreed with, including foreign heads of state. Said a source quoted by the paper: "Officials are wondering how a presidential spokesman, permanent secretary and senior civil servant could do such unprofessional things like writing an abusive column with no information value whatsoever".

In another media development, the Independent reported that the fight for control of the Zimbabwe Mirror Newspapers Group, which it claims has been taken over by the Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO) together with the Gazette, had resulted in the sacking of the Mirror deputy editor-in-chief, Alexander Kanengoni, who is allegedly linked to the CIO. However, the story, like the paper’s initial reports on the issue, relied more on narrative accounts of unnamed sources without providing definitive evidence to back allegations of a CIO buy-out of both the Gazette and the Mirror group.

Notably, none of the media houses accused of having been taken over by the CIO has convincingly refuted these grave allegations. If true, it would mean that the Independent and its sister Sunday paper, The Standard, are the last two mainstream newspapers in Zimbabwe free of government influence – a desperate situation indeed for any country claiming to be a democracy.

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