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Government
media suffocates cases of human rights violations
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2006-32
Monday
7th August – Sunday August 13th 2006
THE
government media this week demonstrated their unreliability as credible
sources of information by their continued suffocation of cases of
human rights violations in the country, especially those that implicated
government or state security agents. Only the private media publicised
these developments. For example, besides reporting government’s
censure of those behind the alleged threats against Reserve Bank
governor Gideon Gono following his blitz on ‘money laundering’ (The
Herald and Chronicle 7/8), the official media showed
bias in their coverage of other human rights abuses committed under
the exercise.
Notably,
they generally remained quiet over reports of degrading body searches
for cash conducted by state security agents manning RBZ roadblocks
to stamp out money laundering. Only one such incident was reported
in The Sunday Mail (13/8) – that of a man whose private parts
were exposed during a search. But even then, the incident, described
by the paper as an "overzealous"
act, was not interpreted as a rights abuse. Moreover, it was buried
deep in a story that sought to justify the blitz.
Apart
from the stripping case, none of the six reports the government
media carried on the subject focussed on the other cases of human
rights violations exposed in the private media. Instead, two of
the stories condemned the Law Society of Zimbabwe for daring to
challenge the legality of Project Sunrise’s emergency powers under
which the searches were being conducted.
But
while the government Press at least made some effort to report these
issues, ZBH, the national public broadcaster, completely ignored
them.
In
contrast, the private media devoted 32 stories to reporting and
condemning these violations, 21 of which were carried by privately
owned electronic media and the remaining 11 stories by private papers.
The reports recorded 15 incidents, including beatings, perpetrated
against ordinary members of society, civic and labour leaders, white
commercial farmers and opposition party members. The perpetrators
of the alleged violations were mostly state security agents.
In
one incident, The Zimbabwe Independent (11/8) reported on
a court case in which State Security Minister Didymus Mutasa was
alleged to have beaten up a Rusape policeman and confiscated a rifle
from another. The revelations were made in the trial of Justice
Minister Patrick Chinamasa on charges of trying to obstruct the
course of justice. The Herald (9/8) censored this disclosure
despite covering the same event.
In
another incident, Studio 7 (8/8), New Zimbabwe.com (9/8)
and The Daily Mirror (11/8) reported on the arrest by police
of MDC MPs Job Sikhala and Goodrich Chimbaira and 20 other people
following protests involving up to 5,000 demonstrators against massive
increases in water charges in Chitungwiza.
Again,
readers of the government media remained entirely unaware of this.
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