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Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from
Weekly Media Update 2006-47
Monday November 20th 2006 - Sunday November 26th 2006
THIS week the
government media used President Mugabe’s visit to Iran and government’s
hosting of various regional meetings to paper over the country’s
pariah status. They carried 38 stories on these matters, of which
21 appeared in the official Press while ZBH aired 17.
Almost all their
reports passively rehashed official statements that sought to portray
the country as enjoying sound international relations.
As a result, there
was no critical assessment of how exactly the country would benefit
from the trip and the meetings. For example, ZBH (22/11, main bulletins)
announced that "six agreements were signed"
between Zimbabwe and Iran resulting in a "memorandum
of understanding on social, political and economic affairs."
Similarly, Spot
FM (23/11, 8pm) simply claimed that the "lives of millions
are to improve through various agreements reached at the Comesa
summit" and other regional meetings the country hosted
without explaining how.
Neither did it
provide information on the agreements.
Instead, the official
broadcaster seemed more interested in sprucing up the images of
the two countries, which it alleged were victims of unwarranted
Western demonisation. While Iran was unreasonably being vilified
for its "nuclear programme", ZBH claimed
(20/11, morning bulletins) that Zimbabwe was unjustifiably being
ostracised for its "land reform".
No attempt was
made to honestly discuss the reasons behind the West’s concerns
over the two countries.
Instead, ZTV and
Spot FM (20/11, 8pm) passively quoted Mugabe narrowly blaming
the West for the chaos in Iraq and lambasting US President George
Bush for naming Zimbabwe and Iran as part of the "axis
of evil". He contended that it was the West
that were the "actual evil doers" Zimbabwe
and Iran had to fight "in order to re-establish a multi-polar
world".
The official Press’
reports were cut from the same cloth.
The Herald and
Chronicle (21/11), for example, passively reported Iranian leader
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad exalting Mugabe as a "prominent,
influential and just leader, a person who loves freedom"
and a "leading fighter against colonialism on
the African continent".
Without reconciling
such remarks with the situation on the ground, particularly state-sanctioned
human rights violations, they then reported (22/11) Iran as having
pledged to "stand by Zimbabwe" and
condemn the "illegal economic sanctions imposed
against Harare by the West".
Besides allowing
Iran to dishonestly present the targeted travel sanctions imposed
on the ruling elite as a trade embargo, the papers did not explain
the actual reasons behind their imposition.
The official
media’s attempt to gloss over the country’s isolation was also apparent
in the manner they handled the country’s hosting of regional ministerial
meetings and the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (Comesa)
summit.
Instead of examining
the import of the meetings, these media narrowly projected them
as yet another affirmation of the international community’s confidence
in Zimbabwe.
For instance,
The Herald (21/11) claimed that contrary to "blatant
lies peddled by the Western propaganda machinery" that
Zimbabwe was isolated, the country’s membership to Comesa "shows
it has never been out of the family of nations".
The government
media’s selective use of favourable statements by foreign diplomats
to distort the country’s true international status and their failure
to professionally handle the matter was reflected in their sourcing
patterns. See Figs 1 and 2.
Fig. 1 Voice
distribution on ZBH
| Mugabe |
Govt |
Foreign
Dignitaries |
Defence |
Traditional
Leaders |
Business |
| 15 |
21 |
33 |
1 |
3 |
1 |
Fig. 2 Voice
distribution in the government Press
| Government
|
Foreign |
Alternative |
| 22 |
25 |
1 |
Notably, none
of the official media tried to balance their reports with alternative
views.
Except for the
Mirror group, the rest of the 11 stories that the private
media carried (Press 9, electronic media 2) did not see anything
beneficial from the presidential visit to Iran and the regional
summits, which they generally ignored.
They noted that
the Iran visit would not benefit Zimbabwe’s economy and would actually
result in further mortgaging the country’s mineral resources.
For example, Studio
7 (21/11) and The Financial Gazette (23/11) revealed that
Zimbabwe had "agreed to supply Iran with (several) minerals"
to settle its debt. The Zimbabwe Independent and
SW Radio Africa (24/11) carried similar reports noting that previous
deals Mugabe had signed with various countries to halt Zimbabwe’s
economic decline had not yielded the desired results.
In addition, the
two pointed out that although Zimbabwe had granted Russia and China
mineral rights in an effort to attract economic aid from the East,
the region has so far "not given Mugabe credit lines".
This, SW Radio
Africa observed, was due to the "lawless business environment"
that government had created in the country.
Although the private
media carried fewer stories, they critically handled the subject
as illustrated by the private electronic media’s balanced sourcing
pattern as shown in Fig 3.
Fig. 3 Voice
distribution in the private electronic media
| Govt |
Unnamed |
Alternative |
Foreign
dignitaries |
| 2 |
1 |
3 |
2 |
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