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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Cholera
and municipal issues
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly
Media Update 2006-2
Monday January 9th – Sunday January 16th 2005
DEBATE on the
cholera outbreak continued to attract media attention in the week,
much of it in the context of municipal service delivery and government’s
reaction to the disease.
The government
Press carried 13 stories on these issues, while the private papers
carried eight. ZBH aired 72 stories on the issue and other related
developments (ZTV [34]; Spot FM [24]; Radio Zimbabwe [14]), while
Studio 7 broadcast three reports and SW Radio Africa one. None of
the media followed up the cholera outbreak adequately, as their
reports lacked independent investigation, relying on official sources
to provide information relating to the severity of the outbreak
in the country.
Neither did
the stories in the official media examine the authorities’ knee-jerk
reactions to the crisis or question the adequacy of government’s
emergency plans, epitomised in the ‘temporary’ relocation of Harare’s
main vegetable market from the squalid, overcrowded Mbare Musika
to the makeshift site at Harare City Sports Centre.
Almost all the
updates on the spread of the disease in the official papers were
buried in reports that narrowly fingered vendors, particularly those
in Mbare, as the source of the pestilence, while simultaneously
stressing how the authorities had taken effective action to contain
the disease.
For example,
The Herald (9/1) concealed revelations of more cholera infections
in Harare inside a story hailing government’s purge of the urban
poor under Murambatsvina as having helped prevent the spread
of the disease. However, the paper (10/1) did not reconcile the
alleged virtues of Murambatsvina with the reason why Harare
City Council closed Mbare Musika, apparently to clean up the market
in Mbare and prevent the spread of cholera.
The paper’s
claims resonated with those made on Spot FM (10/1, 7am) and ZTV
(10/1, 8pm). Instead of quizzing the authorities’ readiness in dealing
with the disease, the two stations passively allowed local government
officials to claim victory over the outbreak, alleging that it would
have been "a major catastrophe" had government
not embarked on its "clean-up" exercise last year.
ZTV quoted one
official, Simbarashe Madungwe saying: "We thank God for
Operation Murambatsvina. We could not have been able to contain
the disease".
But the government
media did not ask the authorities why, after the so-called "clean
up", Mbare Musika had remained an eyesore, or why it had taken
a cholera outbreak to jolt them into action. Neither did these media
view the matter as symptomatic of the failure by the government-appointed
commission running the affairs of Harare to provide adequate public
services – particularly refuse collection.
Although The
Herald (14/1) raised some pertinent questions in its interview
with Local Government Minister Ignatius Chombo, the reporter generally
failed to extract useful information. For example, the minister
was allowed to make the absurd claim that government had failed
to "clean up" Mbare Musika during Murambatsvina
because the market was "not visible by day"
as delivery lorries "nicodemously" came
"at night" and left in the "morning".
Such an unquestioning
nature was also evident in The Herald of the previous day
and on ZTV (13/1, 6pm and 8pm) on the announcement by Chombo that
government would set up "teams" that would
"work 24 hours" to "collect refuse,
fill potholes and repair street lights in the eight districts of
Harare".
These media
simply presented the claim as indicative of government’s commitment
to addressing the myriad problems affecting Harare and ridding it
of cholera without viewing it as an unwitting admission that the
Harare Commission had failed to provide these services.
Neither did
they question whether the $10 billion for refuse collection and
the 80 000 litres of fuel procured for the city by government "to
improve service delivery" and "to contain
further cholera outbreaks" in Harare would suffice,
or even whether this ad hoc intervention by government represented
any rational policy. The official media also failed to reconcile
the authorities’ proposed course of action with the public’s concerns.
For example,
while ZTV (13/1, 6pm and 8pm) reported vendors, commuter omnibus
drivers and residents of the Belvedere neighbourhood expressing
displeasure over the long grass, piles of garbage and a lack of
shelter, ablution and storage facilities at the makeshift market,
it never raised these issues with the authorities.
Instead, The
Herald (13/1) carried an article by presidential health advisor,
Timothy Stamps, wondering why there was "panic"
over the cholera outbreak when "simple hygiene by the
carer" can "bring an epidemic quickly under
control".
He also claimed
that the public would be "better off relying on public
health workers" than seeking medication from private
sector hospitals as they "don’t treat it correctly (using
vaccinations which do not work and antibiotics which cause carriers
to develop)".
However, The
Sunday Mail carried a candid analysis of the problem in its
comment, City leaders’ dereliction of duty unacceptable,
which blamed the Harare Commission for the city’s deteriorating
service delivery.
It implored
government to "start firing probing questions"
at commission officials as they are "doing no better
than the councillors and mayors who have been dismissed in Chitungwiza
and elsewhere".
However, the
rest of the official papers’ stories on the issue toed the official
line as reflected by their reliance on official voices at the expense
of any independent investigation. See Fig 1.
Fig 1 Voice
distribution in the government Press
|
Government
|
Local
government
|
Foreign
|
Ordinary
people
|
Business
|
Professional
|
|
15
|
14
|
1
|
6
|
1
|
1
|
While ZBH quoted more voices (Fig 2) all the official and alternative
voices were quoted portraying government as having prudently dealt
with the cholera outbreak. The public were mainly quoted complaining
about council’s poor service delivery.
Fig. 2 Voice
distribution on ZBH
|
Local
Government
|
Government
|
Alternative
|
Ordinary
people
|
Professional
|
|
24
|
27
|
9
|
69
|
4
|
The private
media also failed to follow-up adequately on the cholera outbreak
in the 12 stories they carried on this and related municipal matters,
three of which were carried by Studio 7, one by SW Radio Africa
and the rest by the private papers.
This skewed
sense of news was illustrated by The Daily Mirror (11/1)
and The Standard (15/1), which relegated reports on new infections
to their health sections.
But while the
Mirror revealed that the number of infections had risen from
181 to 284, The Standard gave no figures.
Both however,
blamed the authorities for failing to contain the outbreak, including
attempts to shroud the extent of the outbreak in secrecy.
The Daily
Mirror (10/1), for example, blamed Harare and Chitungwiza councils
for not providing timely publicity about the disease "leaving
the majority of the urban population in the dark and prone to increased
infections".
The Standard
quoted Zimbabwe Medical Association president Billy Rigava accusing
the ministry of health of failing to "contain a preventable
disease" adding that the outbreak was a "clear
indication of the collapse of the country’s health delivery system".
Rigava contested
official claims that the outbreak was under control, saying this
could only be possible if government "addresses issues
regarding the provision of clean running water and ensures refuse
collection and the removal of rubble" caused by Murambatsvina.
Studio 7 (10/1) and SW Radio Africa (10/1) cited other commentators
expressing similar views.
In addition,
The Standard and Studio 7 (13/1) noted that government’s
relocation of vendors to the City Sports Centre was not a solution
as it merely transferred "the (health) hazard from Mbare
to the city centre" as the new site was "unsuitable
for trading activities".
The Financial
Gazette (12/1) and the Zimbabwe Independent (13/1) were
reticent on the cholera outbreak. However, they did carry two stories
condemning Chombo’s selective dismissal of MDC-led councils as undemocratic.
The private
Press’ sourcing pattern is shown in Fig 3.
Fig 3 Voice
distribution in the private Press
|
Local
govt
|
Govt
|
Professional
|
Alternative
|
MDC
|
Ordinary
people
|
|
9
|
8
|
2
|
6
|
1
|
10
|
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