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Agriculture
and Food Security
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2005-37
September 26th - October 1st 2005
THE government
media generally shied away from discussing Zimbabwe’s precarious
food situation and the chaotic preparations for the new farming
season in 46 stories they carried on the subject. For example, none
of the government media’s 12 stories on food security fully acknowledged
the severity of the matter. Neither did they link it to government’s
chaotic implementation of land reforms or its continued reluctance
to appeal for international humanitarian aid.
Instead, the
stories merely portrayed government as having enough resources to
import grain without giving evidence. For instance, although ZTV
(30/9, 8pm) reported President Mugabe’s assurance that government
had "placed orders to meet our food requirements between
now and the next harvest" it did not verify his attribution
of the continued scarcity of the product to problems in the "system
of distribution, which is occasionally disrupted by prevailing fuel
shortages".
Rather, ZTV
and its counterparts carried five stories that portrayed government
as having made a timely intervention by providing enough fuel, seed
and fertiliser for farmers. But no statistics were provided to give
credence to the claims. The government media’s passive coverage
of the agricultural problems was also evident in the way they skirted
reporting on the new wave of farm invasions. They only covered the
matter in the context of Gono’s reactions to the invasions, which
he condemned as disruptive to the economy (The Herald 30/9
and ZTV30/9, 6pm).
However, The
Sunday Mail introduced a new angle to the chaos in the farming
sector when it reported that High Court judge Justice Bharat Patel
had ruled that offer letters issued to new farmers by government
under the land reforms before the enactment of the Constitutional
Amendment (17) Act 2005 were now invalid.
This followed
an application by a white-owned commercial firm to evict three new
farmers from their Farnley Farm in Chegutu. Although the paper reported
that the rulings had created "a new wave of uncertainty
among scores of new farmers whose land is being contested",
it quoted Justice Minister Chinamasa saying those affected will
be reissued with new offer letters. He did not say when, but hinted
at more "legislative intervention" if need
be, adding that the court actions "were last-ditch attempts"
by former white commercial farmers to scuttle land reforms.
The government
media’s dependence on official opinions is reflected by its sourcing
as illustrated in Fig 1 and 2
Fig 1 Voice
sourcing in the government Press
|
Govt
|
Farmers
|
Alternative
|
Professional
|
Business
|
Foreign
|
Lawyers
|
Judiciary
|
Zanu-
PF
|
|
22
|
2
|
5
|
1
|
3
|
2
|
2
|
2
|
2
|
Fig 2 Voice
distribution on ZBH
|
Govt
|
Farmers
|
Business
|
ZANU
PF
|
Local
Govt
|
Professional
|
|
20
|
4
|
3
|
7
|
1
|
3
|
Government’s
policies on agriculture were only articulated in the private media,
which carried a total of 19 reports: private papers (9), Studio
7 (7) and SW Radio Africa (3).
The stories
included highlighting the plunging poverty levels, diminished food
production and the fresh spate of farm invasions.
The Financial
Gazette comment, for example, blasted government for projecting
land reforms as "a weapon for settling racial and political
scores instead of moulding it into a genuine avenue of redress for
those negatively affected by historical injustices".
SW Radio Africa
(28/9) noted that the country’s "violent land grab"
and "general lawlessness" had discouraged investment
and caused serious foreign currency shortages. Adding their disapproval
of the farm grabs were the IMF and World Bank, which the Sunday
Mirror reported as having urged government to address the matter
"immediately" if the country’s economy is
to get back on track.
Visit the MMPZ
fact sheet
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