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High
court ruling on Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe (ANZ)
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2006-6
Monday February 6th 2006 – Sunday February 12th
2006
THE government
media’s disregard for basic journalistic standards when handling
issues that cast the authorities in an unfavourable light was illustrated
this week by The Herald’s distortion of a High Court ruling
(9/2) ordering the Media and Information Commission (MIC) to reconsider
an application by the Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe (ANZ) for
an operating licence.
The official
daily muddled the full import of Justice Rita Makarau’s invalidation
of the MIC decision not to accredit the ANZ by attempting to lessen
the level of perceived bias of the commission’s chairman, Tafataona
Mahoso, against the publishing house contained in a 2004 Supreme
Court judgment.
It couched Justice
Makarau’s citation of the Supreme Court ruling in semantic jargon
saying its "finding was not of actual bias on the part
of Dr Mahoso", adding that "no lower court
could question a decision of the Supreme Court".
The paper also
tried to underplay the significance of the ruling by claiming that
Justice Makarau had set aside the MIC’s decision "after
the commission’s lawyers conceded there could have been a perception
of bias, without any actual bias".
A clearer version
of the ruling appeared in the Zimbabwe Independent (10/6).
The weekly reported
that besides echoing the Supreme Court’s observations on Mahoso’s
bias, Makarau had also found that there was "merit in
ANZ’s submissions that the MIC as presently constituted was disabled
from validly considering the media organisation’s application as
a result of Mahoso’s involvement in its decisions".
However, the
paper noted that the judge said she could not "order
the appointment of a new commission as that issue was not before
her".
The Herald
misrepresented this aspect by presenting the judge as having dismissed
outright the ANZ’s request to have the "present commission
disbanded". To reinforce this notion, it only cited
Makarau’s reasons for not ordering the establishment of a different
panel to deal with the ANZ’s application.
Notably, the
MIC remained silent over the paper’s unprofessional conduct.
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