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ZBH
news selection and treatment
Media Monitoring Project of Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2006-43
Monday October
23rd 2006 – Sunday October 29th 2006
a. Suffocation
of important news
THE
government broadcaster’s failure to adequately handle pertinent
issues affecting the public was illustrated by its suffocation or
censorship of important stories. For example, ZTV (23/10&24/10,
8pm) buried news that "seven more cases of anthrax have
been detected in humans in Hurungwe" in its bulletins,
preferring to give prominence to less important stories like a conference
on distance education. Worse still, there was no information on
the extent of the pandemic or when it exactly broke out.
The broadcaster
also ignored the resumption of the trial of Michael Peter Hitschman,
who is facing conspiracy charges. This was in stark contrast to
the massive publicity it gave to the case early this year when Hitschman
was arrested together with some MDC officials on charges of plotting
a coup.
Only the private
media [Studio 7 & SW Radio Africa (26/10) and New Zimbabwe.com
(27/10)] reported this important news during the week. It also
demonstrated the government media’s disregard for its journalistic
obligation to report trials it has started reporting on. ZBH also
censored cases of alleged corruption involving government officials.
Again these only appeared in the private media.
b. Misleading
reports
Apart
from suffocating important stories, ZBH also carried misleading
reports that sought to sanitise the country’s crisis. For instance,
this week ZTV continued to give the impression that the local dollar
had remained stable against major currencies, without attributing
it to government controls on the exchange rate.
Besides, the broadcaster
also tried to project the ‘national vision’ document drafted by
some church leaders as having been unconditionally embraced by all
Zimbabweans, including President Mugabe. For example, while ZTV
(27/10, 8pm) reported Mugabe as having wholly endorsed the church
initiative, his comments showed otherwise. He was quoted saying
that although the document was welcome some issues that it proposed
such as the drafting of a new constitution were "not
negotiable," just like "independence"
and "sovereignty".
Similarly, while
Spot FM (27/10, 1pm) depicted the document as having been endorsed
countrywide saying it now belonged to "each and every
Zimbabwean" there was no evidence to support this.
c. Technical
blunders
ZBH’s
poor news presentation was worsened by the technical glitches that
characterised some of its bulletins of the week. These included
poor sound quality, wrong titles and footage mix-ups. ZTV (26/10,
8pm) bulletin epitomized the broadcaster’s technical incompetence.
In its report on the outgoing Austrian Ambassador’s meeting with
Mugabe, the station showed a video of tobacco farmers transplanting
the crop instead.
An effort to correct
the mix-up resulted in more boobs as another wrong video on the
burial of Professor Peresu was aired. It was only after the third
attempt that ZTV finally got it right.
Similarly, Spot
FM (26/10, 8pm) aired a wrong newsreel in place of its usual ‘Good
Evening’ bulletin. The error was only rectified five minutes later.
Besides such blunders the broadcaster also displayed sloppy titling.
For example, ZTV (26/10, 6pm) presented the National Arts Council
as National AIDS Council.
No apologies!
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fact
sheet
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