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Agriculture
and Food Security
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2005-34
Monday September 5th – Sunday September 11th
2005
THE chaos characterising
the agricultural sector ahead of the 2005/6 farming season and the
country’s precarious food situation also hogged the media limelight
in the week.
The media carried
68 stories on the topic, 35 of which appeared on ZBH (ZTV [20],
Power FM [11] and Radio Zimbabwe [4]) and three on Studio 7. The
government Press published 16 stories and the private papers 14.
In a rare display
of unity, all media agreed that the lack of preparedness in the
agricultural sector pointed to a disastrous farming season. ZTV
(6/9, 6pm & 8pm) and Power FM (6/9, 8pm) broke the news on an
impending calamity when they carried detailed reports on damning
submissions by farmers and agro-based industries to the Parliamentary
Portfolio Committee on Lands and Agriculture exposing the problems
besetting the sector. These ranged from acute shortages of fuel,
inputs and equipment to a lack of financial resources.
The next day,
The Herald, Chronicle, The Daily Mirror and
Studio 7 (7/9), also reported on the matter.
ZBH reported
farmers claiming that although government had pledged $7 trillion
for the development of agriculture ($3 trillion for irrigation and
$4 trillion for inputs), none of them had received it.
Zimbabwe Farmers’
Union’s Dzarira Kwenda, for example, told ZTV and Power FM (6/9,
8pm) that the money issue was being "talked about but
nothing is happening", adding, "a lot of
time is being spent with people in government fighting for roles
to play in the whole thing".
Similarly, The
Herald and Chronicle quoted Zimbabwe Farmers’ Union president
Silas Hungwe painting a grim picture on preparations for the next
season. Said Hungwe: "The planning season starts in August
and we do not know when we are going to get fertiliser, chemicals
and seed".
The media also
cited fertiliser companies, seed producers and equipment manufacturers
testifying on their inability to meet farmers’ demands unless they
were allocated foreign currency to import the necessary inputs.
In fact, Agriculture
Dealers Manufacturers Association vice-president Walter Chigwada
was reported in the government dailies as saying the situation was
so serious that his association would not be able to provide even
disc-harrows for tractors. This, Chigwada revealed, was unprecedented
because "we have never run out of discs in Zimbabwe".
However, despite
ZBH’s initial candid coverage, the national public broadcaster later
carried reports that either contradicted its earlier stories or
were laced with editorial intrusions that insincerely depicted government
as having already fulfilled its part of the bargain. For instance,
while the ZBH previously reported players in the farming sector
blaming government for the confusion surrounding preparations for
the farming season, Power FM (7/9, 6am) tried to blame the private
sector. It noted: Government has played its part by the provision
of funding (but) the private sector has not lived up to expectation."
Similarly, while
Power FM (7/9, 6am) initially reported seed, fertiliser and chemical
companies as having "expressed their reservations on
their readiness to supply adequate resources…" ZTV
(7/9, 6pm & 8pm), Power FM (7/9, 8pm) and Radio Zimbabwe (8/9,
6am) reported the same companies as now being well prepared to supply
adequate inputs for the 2005-6 agricultural season.
However, the
government Press did not demonstrate such unprofessional fickleness.
They, like the private media, continued to criticise the authorities
for the looming agricultural mess. For example, The Herald
(8/7) blamed the Ministry of Agriculture for the poor planning saying
"we will have ourselves to blame if we get good rains
but fail to effectively use our land owing to shortages of inputs".
The candid manner
in which both the private and government papers treated the topic
was reflected by their voice distribution as shown in Figs 5 and
6.
Both sections
of the Press tried to balance official comments with views from
the business community, farmers and alternative sources, which all
expressed their concerns on the sorry state of affairs in the agricultural
sector.
Fig 5 Voice
distribution in the government Press
|
Government
|
Alternative
|
Business
|
Farmers
|
ZANU
PF
|
|
13
|
3
|
4
|
10
|
2
|
Fig 6 Voice
distribution in the private Press
|
Government
|
Alternative
|
Business
|
Chiefs
|
Farmers
|
Foreign
|
ZANU
PF
|
|
8
|
5
|
8
|
1
|
3
|
1
|
1
|
However, the
official media compromised their openness in handling the topic
by censoring shocking reports on Zimbabwe’s dwindling food supplies
by a senior government official. They failed to report the revelations
by Permanent Secretary of Agriculture Simon Pazvakavambwa, at the
Confederation of Zimbabwe Industries congress, that the country
was only left with three weeks’ supply of grain.
This news only
appeared in the Independent, The Daily Mirror and
Studio 7(10/9).
Studio 7 also
carried five reports highlighting the country’s current precarious
food situation, including two stories on international aid agencies’
concerns about Zimbabwe’s reluctance to officially seek assistance.
The station
(9/9) quoted MDC secretary for agriculture Renson Gasela saying
the government was reluctant to disclose "how dangerously
low " food supplies had dwindled because "it
did not want to discredit land reform". He said government
had even lied that the nation had harvested 2.4 million tonnes of
maize while simultaneously importing grain secretly because it "wanted
to give the impression that land reform was successful and had produced
a surplus…"
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