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Elections
Media Monitoring Project of Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2006-43
Monday October
23rd 2006 – Sunday October 29th 2006
THE media inadequately
handled last weekend’s local government elections, most of which
were won by ZANU PF. Generally, they provided little information
on the mechanics governing the polls. As a result, the electorate
largely remained in the dark on the state of the voters’ rolls,
ward demarcations, the location of polling stations and the composition
and credentials of accredited observers.
In fact, voters
only learnt of the location of voting booths on the day of the election
through an advertisement placed in The Herald (28/10). But
how the electoral authorities expected voters – especially those
in the rural areas where most of the elections were held – to access
at short notice such vital information from the paper, which largely
circulates in urban centres remained unquestioned.
Instead, the official
media carried 26 stories (ZBH [23] and government Press [3]) that
passively quoted the electoral authorities expressing their readiness
for the polls. For example, ZTV and Spot FM (25/10, 8pm) passively
reported the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission saying it had established
3 000 polling stations without investigating whether they were adequate.
Similarly, The
Herald (26/10) simply announced that accreditation of observers
was underway without informing its readers about how many were eventually
accredited.
Rather, the government
media seemed more interested in promoting ZANU PF. For example –
in clear violation of its public service mandate – all 17 campaign
stories that ZBH aired were on the ruling party. None was on the
opposition. The MDC was mainly mentioned in the context of ZANU
PF’s vilification of the party. Likewise, of the nine campaign stories
the official papers carried, seven were exclusively on the ruling
party while only two reported all the contesting parties commenting
on their preparations.
Even then, the
stories contained editorial intrusions that maligned the opposition
as a British puppet bereft of meaningful policies.
For instance,
after reporting on the Morgan Tsvangirai-led MDC’s preparations,
the Chronicle (26/10) then vilified the party as a "British
backed opposition party" that was "obsessed
with opposing everything that ZANU-PF says or does no matter how
good without offering any alternatives." On the contrary,
all stories on ZANU PF that the official media carried were glowing
projections of the party.
It was in this
context that they avoided the in-house squabbles in the ruling party,
which resulted in it registering two sets of candidates for each
of the five wards in Kadoma.
ZBH (24&27/10,
8pm), The Herald and The Chronicle (25/10) merely
reported ZANU PF officials threatening to expel candidates who had
defied the party by contesting the elections without investigating
the cause for such dissent.
The government
media’s unbalanced coverage was illustrated by their sourcing patterns
as shown in Figs 1 and 2.
Fig. 1 Voice
distribution on ZBH
| Govt |
Electoral
bodies |
Police |
Zanu
PF |
MDC |
Independents |
| 4 |
17 |
8 |
39 |
0 |
0 |
Although the government
papers’ voice distribution appeared balanced, they mainly quoted
MDC voices in the context of dismissing their views and concerns.
Fig. 2 Voice
Distribution in the official papers
| Government |
ZANU
PF |
MDC
(both factions) |
Electoral
authorities |
Police |
| 5 |
7 |
6 |
3 |
1 |
Except for the
two stories that Studio 7 carried quoting the Zimbabwe
Election Support Network bemoaning inadequate voter registration
and education, the private media were no better. They barely assessed
the country’s electoral framework.
Instead, they
gave more space to campaigns and politically motivated violence.
But unlike the
government media, the private papers strove for balance by giving
publicity to ZANU PF campaigns in three cases, Tsvangirai faction
(two) and the Arthur Mutambara-led MDC (once). Similarly, Studio
7 gave space to all contesting parties: ZANU PF (twice), Tsvangirai
group (twice) and the Mutambara camp (once).
However, other
private media did not display such fairness.
The three campaign
reports carried by SW Radio Africa and the online news agency, Zimdaily
only focused on the Morgan Tsvangirai-led MDC faction, while New
Zimbabwe.com’s single story was on ZANU PF factionalism in
Kadoma.
Such imbalance
was more apparent in the 15 reports the private media carried (private
electronic media [8] and private Press [7]) on incidents of electoral
violence and rights abuses by the ruling party against its opponents.
Almost all the
reports relied on the MDC allegations and lacked independent verification.
The government
media completely ignored such reports but simply magnified the authorities
statements that the campaign period was peaceful.
It is against
this background that ZBH (25/10, 8pm) and The Herald (26/20)
failed to give full details on the six cases of "petty"
political violence the police said they recorded in Rushinga, Glendale
and Gokwe.
Instead, ZBH drowned
the matter with police assurances that they would ensure there was
"peace and tranquility", adding that the
situation was "conducive for free and fair elections".
The private media’s
sourcing patterns are shown in Figs 1 and 2.
Fig. 1 Voice
distribution in the Private press
| ZANU
PF |
MDC |
Traditional
leaders |
Electoral
Authorities |
Police |
Alternative |
| 9 |
4 |
1 |
1 |
2 |
4 |
Fig. 2 Voice
distribution in the private electronic media
| ZANU
PF |
MDC |
Govt |
Alternative |
Unnamed |
| 5 |
15 |
2 |
3 |
2 |
Notably, most
MDC voices were quoted accusing the ruling party of fanning political
violence.
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fact
sheet
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