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Electoral violence and other related violations
Media Monitoring Project of Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2006-43
Monday October 23rd 2006 – Sunday October 29th 2006

THIS week the government media ignored incidents of electoral violence and other related violations.

As has become the norm, only the private media exposed the abuses. They carried 15 reports that highlighted cases of arson, violent attacks, intimidation and vote-buying, allegedly perpetrated by ZANU PF activists against perceived MDC members. However, almost all the reports mainly relied on the opposition claims and lacked independent corroboration. For example, in one of the stories, SW Radio Africa (23/10) quoted MDC’s suspended Chitungwiza mayor Misheck Shoko claiming that he "survived an assassination attempt" after "unidentified gunmen opened fire at his house" and "fired three shots at him at close range".

No effort was made to establish the veracity of these serious allegations.

Instead, the station simply allowed him to attribute the incidents to suspected "ZANU PF security organs", who had "trailed him from the moment he started campaigning in some rural wards in Dema".

The station (25/10) and Studio 7 (26/10) also reported the opposition accusing ruling party activists of burning down its supporters’ houses in Gokwe, Mudzi, Mutoko and some parts of Manicaland. The stories were part of several unsubstantiated reports the private media carried on electoral violence.

The private electronic media also carried three other incidents of rights violations. These were on the arrest of university students and Women of Zimbabwe Arise activists on allegations of engaging in ‘illegal’ demonstrations and addressing unsanctioned public gatherings.

The government media also censored these cases.

They similarly ignored reports of government’s intention to introduce legislation that would cripple private telecommunications companies by giving the state-owned TelOne a monopoly over foreign currency earned through termination rates for international traffic.

This appeared in the Zimbabwe Independent (27/10).

The move, the paper noted, was in disregard of a January 2004 High Court ruling that set aside a similar statutory instrument and in "violation of a 1998 Supreme Court ruling", which struck down the state’s monopoly on communications.

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