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Statement
on the attack of the Financial Gazette's 'Mavis Makuni' by the Herald
MISA-Zimbabwe and Media Monitoring Project of Zimbabwe
(MMPZ)
February 22, 2006
The Media Institute
of Southern Africa (MISA) Zimbabwe and the Media Monitoring Project
of Zimbabwe (MMPZ) would like to express shock at the outrageous,
chauvinistic comment targeted at The Financial Gazette columnist
"Mavis Makuni" in The Saturday Herald’s issue of
18 February 2006.
Nathaniel Manheru’s
opinion piece: The Other Side entitled Muleya/Makuni The
deep scar of colonial enslavement, misgovernance, was a dehumanising
and blatant attack which went beyond the right to freedom of expression
and opinion.
Mavis Makuni
in the Financial Gazette of February 16 – 22 2006, wrote an article
entitled: Mbeki’s failure only prolongs our misery. The article
was based on a personal opinion of Mbeki’s quiet diplomacy on Zimbabwe’s
crisis.
In response
to Makuni’s article Manheru claims that Makuni’s opinion is "a
case of P.M.T (Pre-menstrual Tension) senselessness" and that
Mbeki should not be bothered by comments made by "one menopausal
‘Mavis Makuni’". Such comments are not only unethical but expose
Manheru’s bigotry, which is unacceptable in a civilised society.
These are natural
processes that every woman goes through and should not be used as
a basis for judging one’s intellect and mental syntax.
Manheru has
a right to his own opinions but he should address the issues raised
by Makuni instead of the unprofessional and unwarranted attack on
the personhood of the author. It is such biases and prejudices that
entrench negative stereotypes of women as lesser and incapable beings.
While MISA-Zimbabwe
and the MMPZ uphold the principles of freedom of expression, it
is our considered view that Manheru’s comments go beyond the bounds
of decency and fair comment.
The Constitution
of Zimbabwe entitles everyone to enjoy freedom of expression and
opinion regardless of their biological dispositions, age and political
affiliation.
Such spur of
the moment utterances by Manheru expose a mindset that is demeaning
of women and their status as equal to men. It goes against the very
grain of government’s policy of empowering women and elevating them
to positions of authority.
The progressive
world frowns upon such statements as gender insensitive and retrogressive
particularly at a time when African women are proving their mettle
by assuming positions of authority as exemplified by our own Vice
President Joice Mujuru, Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka of South Africa and
Africa’s first elected female Head of State Ellen Johnson Sirleaf
of Liberia.
We hope The
Herald and Manheru will realise the serious impact of such gender
insensitive journalism manifesting itself in one of the country’s
leading newspapers and apologise to Mavis Makuni and the women of
Zimbabwe as a whole.
Visit the MISA-Zimbabwe
fact sheet
Visit the MMPZ
fact sheet
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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