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Town
House circus
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2006-26
Monday June 26th 2006 - Sunday July 2nd 2006
THIS week the
government media continued to dither from fingering the real cause
of the chaos characterising the administration of Harare, particularly
the power struggle between Harare Commission chairperson Sekesai
Makwavarara and Town Clerk Nomutsa Chideya.
These media
carried a total of 22 stories on the issue: government papers (16)
and ZBH (six).
None of their
stories informed their audiences adequately of the goings-on at
Town House or interpreted them in the context of government’s continued
interference in council affairs. For example, the reports did not
sufficiently examine the basis or mandate under which Makwavarara
suspended Chideya. Neither did they question the seemingly irreconcilable
conflicting opinion on the matter between Local Government Minister
Ignatius Chombo and the ruling party’s Harare province.
For example,
while ZTV (29/6, 8pm) passively quoted Chombo endorsing Chideya’s
ouster when he announced the setting up of a commission of inquiry
into his suspension, it and Radio Zimbabwe (30/6, 7am and 6am) cited
ZANU PF’s Harare province publicity secretary William Nhara declaring
that the party’s provincial central committee had no confidence
in Makwavarara because "she lacked leadership qualities
and professionalism".
The Herald
(30/1 & 1/7) was equally sloppy. It did not reconcile Chombo’s
claims that service delivery had improved under Makwavarara’s tenure
with Nhara’s contention that "the general ratepayer in
Harare and …Zanu PF" only saw the "deterioration
in service delivery".
There was also
no detail on the provisions of Section 139 (4) of the Urban Councils
Act, which Chombo used to justify Chideya’s suspension and the setting
up of a commission of inquiry to investigate allegations levelled
against him. Neither did the official media ask him why government
continued dodging the issue of elections so that Harare residents
could elect city administrators of their choice.
Instead, The
Herald (1/7) evidently endorsed government’s determination to
evade the will of the capital’s residents by urging him to appoint
another commission of "highly efficient…business professionals"
to replace "holdovers from a failed council, including…
Makwavarara" because allowing them to stay on
"simply ensured that the commission would have the faults of
the old council without even the virtue of being accountable to
residents".
The government
media’s uncritical handling of the topic was mirrored by their failure
to source alternative comments as captured in Fig 1 and 2.
Fig. 1 Voice
distribution in the government Press
| Govt |
Local
govt |
Alternative |
Lawyers |
Zanu-
PF |
Ordinary
people |
| 4 |
10 |
0 |
3 |
2 |
6 |
Fig. 2 Voice
Distribution on ZBH
| Ordinary
People |
Government |
ZANU
PF |
Alternative |
| 4 |
2 |
2 |
0 |
In contrast,
most of the private papers’ 13 stories on the subject openly queried
Makwavarara’s management style, including her controversial suspension
of Chideya.
The Zimbabwe
Independent (30/6), for example, noted that the endorsement
of Chideya’s suspension by Chombo "raises fears that
Makwavarara’s obdurate behaviour at Town House could have been sanctioned
by the government". It wondered "why government
would offer Chideya a job at Udcorp when he is facing suspension
for mismanagement".
Its Editor’s
Memo argued that while government supported Chideya’s suspension,
it preferred to keep the "super inefficient Makwavarara"
because she was a "convenient mess" that
ensured "the opposition MDC is kept out of Town House".
Although the
Mirror papers fairly reported the bickering, which they said
had spilt into ZANU PF Harare structures, they supported government’s
continued meddling in the council’s affairs by defending Chombo’s
re-appointment of the Makwavarara-led commission (27/6), which it
claimed had "improved" service delivery
in the city.
But while the
paper was hailing the commission, Studio 7 and SW Radio Africa (28/6)
and The Standard (2/7) reported the Combined Harare Residents’
Association (CHRA) calling on Harare residents to boycott payment
of rates "until new elections for the city are held".
The sourcing
pattern of the private papers is shown in Fig 3.
Fig. 3 Voice
distribution in the private Press
| Govt |
Local
govt |
Zanu-
PF |
MDC |
Alternative |
Ordinary
people |
| 8 |
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