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Front-page news stories
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2006-45
Monday November 6th 2006 – Sunday November 12th 2006

THIS week MMPZ monitored 70 front-page stories from the Press to assess their news value. Of these, 50 appeared in the government-controlled papers and the remaining 20 in the private Press.

Although the government-controlled papers mirrored most of the week’s topical developments, their treatment of the issues were generally lopsided as they largely peddled official views at the expense of alternative opinion. This was apparent in their coverage of the alleged Ziscosteel (Zisco) corruption, Sino-Africa summit, hand-over of farm leases to selected resettled A2 farmers and the importation of low-grade fertiliser.

None of these issues were openly debated. For example, the Chinese-Africa Summit was basically presented through the eyes of President Mugabe while the Zisco scandal was premised on official denials of the alleged pillaging of the state-owned enterprise.

Consequently, there was no reconciliation of the official responses with the findings of the corruption investigation done by the Finance Ministry’s National Economic Conduct Inspectorate (NECI). For instance, The Herald (9/11) passively allowed Zisco bosses to dismiss the graft allegations either by accusing NECI of having allegedly "transformed media speculation into a report" or blaming an unnamed Midlands MDC MP for orchestrating the corruption claims as part of an agenda to remove "the ZANU PF aligned management" from the company.

The official papers’ uncritical approach remained unbroken in their coverage of farm leases. The stories merely celebrated the development without establishing the identities of the beneficiaries, the criteria used to select them or how the leases "could be used as collateral for borrowing from banks and other lenders" (The Herald and Chronicle 10/11). Neither did the government papers go beyond official explanations on the controversy surrounding the importation of substandard fertiliser (The Sunday Mail 12/11). Only when dealing with crime reports, court cases and human-interest stories did the papers generally give more informative accounts.

However, not all topical issues were captured in the government papers’ front pages. For example, none of them gave prominence to the rise in inflation from 1 023% in September to 1 070% in October. The Herald (11/11) buried the story on page 11 while the Chronicle of the same day placed it on page two. Worse still, the Chronicle actually drowned the subject with Finance Deputy Minister David Chapfika’s forecasts that the inflation rate would "tumble" to "980 percent by the end of the year" due to government’s economic turnaround strategies. Only the Mirror stable carried the story on the front page, including announcing an increase in the Total Consumption Poverty Line for five people, from $134 649 in September to $175 974 in October (Daily Mirror 11/11). In addition, its (12/11) report on the importation of the "fake" fertiliser was more researched than that of the government Press.

In fact, except for its passive coverage of the Africa-China Summit and farm leases, the rest of the stories that the stable published on its front pages were fairly presented. Among these were reports on a ruling by the High Court barring government from granting NetOne monopoly over foreign currency earnings accrued from international termination rates and allegations of in-house fighting in both ZANU PF and the MDC.

The in-depth coverage of important issues was more apparent in the Zimbabwe Independent (10/11) and The Standard (12/11). For example, rather than restrict itself to official pronouncements on the goings-on at Zisco, the Independent investigated the pillaging of the company by top government officials. No other paper went that extra mile during the week. Similarly, The Standard – just like the Sunday Mirror – boldly reported on the furore in government over the importation of poor quality fertiliser on their front pages as compared to The Sunday Mail (12/11)’s timid, damage control headline story: The fertilisergate that never was.

Two of the three stories that The Financial Gazette (9/11) carried on its front page though topical, were largely compromised by their sensationalised headlines. For example, while the paper announced: MDC camps bury hatchet, there was no evidence in the story supporting this, as the spokesmen from both factions never specifically said this. The basis of the papers’ claims only appeared to come from unnamed "insiders" from the rival factions. The story, Mugabe to wield axe, was tailored in the same fashion.

It quoted unnamed ZANU PF ‘insiders’ claiming manoeuvres by the Solomon Mujuru faction to whittle the composition of the ruling party’s supreme decision-making body, in its determination to curtail the influence of its rival camp, led by Emmerson Mnangagwa, as the succession battles continue.

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