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Urgent
need for more alternative daily sources of information
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly
Media Update 2006-2
Monday January 9th – Sunday January 16th 2005
THE failure
by the government media and The Daily Mirror to report on
an urgent High Court application by Chitungwiza mayor Misheck Shoko
challenging his suspension from office once again underscores the
urgent need for more alternative daily sources of information that
would adequately inform the public on pertinent news.
Only the niche
market radio stations, SW Radio Africa and Studio 7 (17/1), and
the Financial Gazette (19/1) reported the matter.
However, SW
Radio Africa falsely reported that the High Court had "lifted
the suspension" on the basis that "it was
unconstitutional" when in actual fact Shoko had only
filed his papers, which the court has yet to make a ruling on.
Accurate versions
of the story appeared in the Gazette and Studio 7.
Citing the mayor’s
affidavit, the Gazette, for example, reported that Shoko
was seeking the nullification of government’s action on grounds
that it was "grossly unreasonable" and driven
by "political malice and capriciousness" as
there were no "reasonable grounds" warranting
"invocation of Section 54 (2) of the Urban Councils Act"
the authorities used to suspend him.
But while the
government-controlled media ignores such important news, it continues
to give acres of space to columnists and government officials to
malign individuals they disagree with.
Nothing more
clearly illustrates such abuse of the public media than a 90-column
centimetre article in The Sunday Mail (15/1) by Information
Secretary George Charamba, gratuitously attacking lawyer Beatrice
Mtetwa.
Instead of discussing
the substance of Mtetwa’s comments on the country’s repressive media
laws that she made in an interview with The Mail and Guardian
(21/12) (reprinted in the Zimbabwe Independent 6/1), Charamba
simply clouded the issue with a long-winded, vindictive personal
attack on the human rights activist attempting to discredit her
as a competent lawyer.
He dismissed
Mtetwa’s observations, saying she wanted to make a "name
for herself in the field of journalism…(which) lies well outside
her training and competence". He stated that "dubious
awards and gratuitous publicity" she might receive
from "expectedly grateful governmental and media systems
of the West" will not "take away…the fact
that AIPPA is a law of the land".
Such wantonly
malevolent tirades, which have also become the hallmark of The
Herald’s faceless columnist Nathaniel Manheru, demonstrate the
extent to which the government-controlled Press in particular, are
being used to propagate hatred and disaffection against groups and
individuals perceived to be critics of government. Such unprofessional
outbursts severely undermine ethical journalistic standards and
practice, to which the government-appointed Media and Information
Commission has seemingly remained blind.
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fact sheet
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