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Local
government decay and cholera
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2006-7
Monday February 13th – Sunday February 19th
2006
THIS week the
media, particularly the government controlled media, generally failed
to report adequately on developments affecting urban councils and
new outbreaks of cholera.
The government-controlled
Press devoted 21 stories to these issues and the private Press 15.
The broadcast media aired 34, of which 29 featured on ZBH while
the remaining five were on private radio stations.
But despite
carrying most of the stories, mainly exposing the circus surrounding
the government-appointed commission’s administration of Harare,
the government media barely discussed the real causes of the problems.
For example, none of their reports questioned the basis on which
Harare Commission chair Sekesai Makwavarara wanted to occupy and
furnish the mayoral mansion at residents’ expense. Neither did they
seek comment from the authorities to account for this confusion
since they were responsible for imposing the commission on the city.
Otherwise, The
Herald simply carried Makwavarara’s plans to spend $35 billion
on decorating the mayoral mansion (13 & 16/2) and the infighting
in the commission (15 &17/2) as mere event reports.
And although
ZBH (13 & 16/2, main bulletins) quoted Harare residents and
the Combined Harare Residents Association (CHRA) condemning Makwavarara’s
extravagance and poor service delivery in the city, it would not
view these issues as an indictment of government’s failure to superintend
its commission.
Such passive
coverage allowed The Herald (17/2) to provide its readers
with another event report, this time of Local Government Minister
Ignatius Chombo’s defence in Parliament of the Harare chaos, saying
government had "confidence" in the Makwavarara-run
city although it would continue "monitoring events".
Earlier, ZTV
(16/2, 6pm) tried to shift the blame by passively reporting Harare
residents criticizing their MPs for "turning a deaf ear
to their plight". It allowed this blatant
attempt to discredit opposition party legislators to pass.
The government
media’s failure to report the commission’s poor service delivery
professionally also manifested itself in their coverage of the spread
of cholera in the country. Their stories generally failed to view
the epidemic as a national problem deserving urgent attention. For
example, The Herald (13/2) reported the five new cholera
deaths in Epworth as another one-off event that occurred after the
victims "may have been infected after drinking contaminated
water at a funeral".
No serious concerns
were raised on the persistent outbreak of the disease, whose reported
national death toll now stands at about 30. Instead, the paper drowned
its audiences in official rhetoric on how government had brought
"the situation under control" without asking
why the pestilence continued to spread if indeed it had been contained.
ZBH was the
worst in this regard.
While Spot FM
and Radio Zimbabwe inexplicably ignored the news, ZTV (13/2, 8pm)
buried the casualties in a report in which Health Minister David
Parirenyatwa called on Zimbabweans to be "on the high
alert in the wake of cholera outbreaks" in the country.
It would not even report when the deaths occurred.
However, The
Sunday Mail (19/2) was candid.
It wondered
why the authorities were only reacting to deaths rather than "act
proactively" to prevent the outbreak of the disease,
adding that as long as unsanitary conditions prevailed in Epworth
the lives of the people in the area "would remain as
precarious a position as the Balancing Rocks that greet people as
they enter the settlement".
Typically, the
official media depended heavily on official pronouncements in their
coverage of the topic as captured in Figs 1 and 2.
Fig 1 Voice
distribution on ZBH
|
Govt
|
Local
govt
|
Alternative
|
Professional
|
Ordinary
people
|
|
20
|
7
|
6
|
1
|
15
|
Fig 6 Voice
distribution in the government Press
|
Govt
|
Local
govt
|
Ordinary
people
|
Professional
|
Alternative
|
|
18
|
11
|
7
|
1
|
1
|
The private
media also under-covered the cholera outbreak. They carried five
stories on the matter, three of which appeared on the private radio
stations while two were in the Press. While the Independent
and SW Radio Africa (14 & 17/2) reported the latest Epworth
cholera deaths in the context of the Harare commission’s skewed
priorities, the stories on Studio 7 (13/7) and in The Daily Mirror
(17/2) were mainly based on official statements.
However, all
private media continued to criticise the confusion at Town House,
which, they contended, had taken a heavy toll on service delivery.
But whereas the Mirror stable simply ended in chastising
the commission, the Independent, Studio 7 and SW Radio Africa
went further. For example, the weekly’s columnist, Muckraker,
squarely blamed Chombo for the chaos, saying he was responsible
for ushering Makwavarara into Town House "through the
back door". Consequently, added the columnist, Makwavarara
was "Chombo’s personal creation" that he
must deal with after he had "imposed" her
"as part of a temporary structure pending elections".
The columnist
also pointed out that it was "misguided"
for people to call for government "intervention"
when it was "already involved up to its neck".
SW Radio Africa
(17/2) also quoted analysts blaming Chombo for the mess in the capital.
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