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Coverage
of submissions made to parliamentary portfolio committees
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2006-36
Monday September 4th
2006- Sunday September 10th 2006
THE government
media’s unreliability was reaffirmed by their coverage of submissions
made to various parliamentary portfolio committees (PPCs) during
the week.
Although they
reported on most of the submissions, they largely fed on official
statements to the PPCs and censored the committees’ displeasure
at the manner in which some government departments were being administered.
This only emerged
in the private media. The Financial Gazette (8/9), for example,
reported the chairman of the PPC on Agriculture, Walter Mzembi,
saying his committee was unhappy with the "testimony"
from Agriculture Minister Joseph Made because it was "unconvincing"
about the way his ministry was running agriculture. He noted that
his committee believed there was "need to put in
place proper administrative structures if the country’s agricultural
sector is to reach its peak" because there was
a "glaring lack of proper management structures
at several institutions falling under Made’s ministry".
The government
media ignored this, preferring to focus narrowly on Mzembi’s criticism
of the Grain Marketing Board management (The Herald (6/9).
Similarly, The
Herald and Chronicle (5/9) censored the concerns expressed
by the PPC on Transport and Communications about sections of the
proposed Interception
of Communications Bill and gave prominence to Transport Minister
Chris Mushohwe’s defence of the Bill.
It was only
through The Daily Mirror (5/9) that the public got to know
of some of the committee’s worries, which Mushohwe reportedly promised
to address. But such open coverage of parliamentary proceedings
could be curtailed. The Herald (8/9) reported Clerk of Parliament
Austin Zvoma threatening to "bar"
the media, which he claimed "distorted"
parliamentary proceedings to "further their ulterior
motives". The paper allowed him to twist the role
of the media in covering public institutions such as Parliament
when it passively reported him claiming, "covering
Parliament was not a right but a privilege".
While the private
media often performs better than their government counterparts in
covering issues affecting people’s livelihoods, they have in some
cases, displayed an appalling lack of interest in properly investigating
numerous issues that are inadequately covered in the media. Their
silence on the August 27th Dibamombe train crash is a
case in point. Like the official media, none of the mainstream private
media has bothered to follow up on the crash to verify official
claims on the causes of the accident, and the number of casualties.
Only SW Radio
Africa (7/9) did so.
It reported
villagers, national railways officials and medical workers who attended
to the victims disputing official casualty figures, saying they
were far too low for a collision that involved a goods train carrying
inflammable products and a passenger train carrying hundreds of
Zimbabweans and Zambians returning from South Africa.
They claimed
that "more than 100 people"
could have died in the crash in contrast to the official
record of seven deaths. An unnamed railway official told the station
that the five that were initially reported as having died were "actually
crew members".
Eyewitnesses
confirmed this, claiming that at least "two coaches
packed with people were burnt", while an unnamed
nurse said that 189 people had been treated and not just 20 as reported
in the media.
According to
the report, the official figures were so unconvincing that Zambian
authorities sent an investigating team to corroborate them.
The failure
by the mainstream media to independently investigate the matter
once again exposes their limitations and demonstrates a desperate
public need for more media outlets prepared to investigate the mysteries
that remain unanswered by Zimbabwe’s few surviving media organizations.
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