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Political
developments
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted
from Weekly Media Update 2007-20
Monday May 21st 2007 - Sunday May 27th 2007
May 30, 2007
THIS week the
media continued to report on the international community's
concerns over Zimbabwe's worsening crisis. They devoted 71
stories to the matter, 43 of which appeared in the government-controlled
Press and 28 in the private papers. However, the official Press
either censored or buried widespread condemnation of the country's
misrule and only approvingly reported on developments that appeared
to reflect regional support for Zimbabwe. As a result, they failed
to give an accurate picture of world opinion, especially in Africa,
about the country's deteriorating situation. For example,
while they dismissed criticism of government's poor human
rights record by the African Union (AU), the Pan-African Parliament
(PAP) and the African Commission on Human and People's Rights
(ACHPR) as being influenced by the West, they favourably reported
on the support Zimbabwe received from the Common Market for Eastern
and Southern Africa (Comesa) and the African Development Bank (ADB).
Such selective
reporting resulted in The Sunday Mail (27/5) using the Africa Day
celebrations to line up pro-government columnists to attack the
AU, PAP and ACHPR for allegedly colluding with the West to malign
Zimbabwe. These included Media and Information Commission (MIC)
chair Tafataona Mahoso and the paper's political editor Munyaradzi
Huni. Huni, for example, accused the AU of being "hijacked
by the imperialists", saying the "solidarity and vigilance"
with which the continent used to fight colonialism "has disappeared"
resulting in the continental body failing to take firm decisions
to tackle problems in Somalia, Sudan and Zimbabwe, which is "under
siege" from the West. To whip up pan-Africanist emotions,
Huni wondered if the late Ghanaian leader Nkwame Nkrumah and Patrice
Lumumba would have allowed the West to "orchestrate an economic
war against the people of Zimbabwe" and "demonise President
Mugabe". He then portrayed AU chairman John Kufuor as having
been "pocketed by the imperialists".
Mahoso echoed
similar claims.
In addition,
the government weekly suffocated former Ghanaian President Jerry
Rawlings's criticism of government's policies with Justice
Minister Patrick Chinamasa's insistence that the authorities
had "no apologies to make" for the problems facing the
country. Neither did it provide circumstances under which the meeting
between the two, held at Rawlings' house, was held. Earlier,
The Herald (21/5) censored NGOs' concerns about the country's
deteriorating human rights record at the ordinary session of the
ACHPR in Ghana and only gave space to Chinamasa's refusal
to participate in a proposed dialogue with civic bodies on the matter
on the basis that the discussion was unprocedural.
There was no
independent verification of his claims.
While the government
media criticised regional bodies that raised concerns on the country's
deepening crisis, they reported favourably on Comesa and the ADB
for their apparent support for Zimbabwe. In fact, all 13 stories
ZBC carried on the country's international relations narrowly
celebrated Zimbabwe's election to the boards of these organisations
as indicative of the country's support against Western machinations
to isolate it. For example, Spot FM, ZTV (21/5, 8pm) and Radio Zimbabwe
(22/5, 6am) reported Foreign Affairs Minister Simbarashe Mumbengegwi
hailing the election of Secretary for Economic Development Andrew
Bvumbe to the management of the ADB (just after Zimbabwe was elected
to chair the UN Commission on Sustainable Development) as another
expression of the "international community's confidence
in the country's competence."
The circumstances
surrounding Bvumbe's election were not discussed. Instead,
the stations simply quoted Mumbengegwi saying, "instead of
Zimbabwe being isolated, it was actually the Western detractors
who were being isolated." Similarly, ZTV & Spot FM (22/5,
8pm), The Herald and Chronicle (23/5) celebrated the "election"
of Zimbabwe to the vice-chairmanship of Comesa as yet another "show
of confidence" in the country. None of these media explained
the circumstances leading to the country's election save for
Mumbengegwi's vague claims that it was after the country had
"offered" itself "for selection and was chosen
as per the rules and procedure of Comesa". Neither did they
examine the negative impact of government's repressive policies
on the country's democratic process such as the extension
of the ban on rallies and demonstrations in Harare.
The Herald (25/5),
for example, unquestioningly quoted the police defending the ban
as aimed at "maintaining order in the capital". ZTV
and Spot FM (24/5 6 & 8pm) also passively reported the ban's
extension. No comments were sought from the opposition or independent
analysts. Instead, the next day the paper cited Security Minister
Didymus Mutasa defending POSA, under which the ban was invoked,
as vital in "checking Western-sponsored pandemonium in the
country".
The government
media's failure to report critically on the topic was illustrated
by their failure to balance their reports with alternative views
as reflected in the official papers' sourcing pattern (Fig
1). Although they carried a significant number of foreign diplomatic
voices, their comments were mainly used in the context of supporting
Zimbabwe.
Fig. 1 Voice
distribution in the government Press
|
Govt |
Foreign |
Alternative |
Zanu
PF |
MDC |
Police |
War
veterans |
Unnamed |
|
20 |
16 |
3 |
7 |
3 |
8 |
2 |
4 |
In contrast,
the private media exposed the fallacy of government claims of diplomatic
victory against its perceived Western enemies. They revealed more
widespread condemnation of government's policies. Among those
reported to be pushing for policy changes were the grouping of industrialised
nations in the West, the G8, the UN Centre on Housing Rights and
Evictions (COHRE) and the African, Caribbean and Pacific - European
Union Joint Parliamentary Assembly (ACP-EU).
For example,
all three private weeklies and the private electronic media (23/5)
reported COHRE's disapproval of government's purge of
the urban poor under Operation
Murambatsvina, saying it was a "crime against humanity"
that "should be taken to the International Criminal Court".
It was in this
light that The Standard (27/5) warned against government's
alleged diplomatic victories following Zimbabwe's 'election'
into the UN, ADB and Comesa saying: "None of these posts will
ultimately change the direction of world trade or improve relations
between Africa and the rest of the world". However, the paper
also failed to explore the conditions under which Zimbabwe landed
the positions.
But the private
media did provide an informative round-up of the ACHPR session in
Ghana. Studio 7 (21/5), The Zimbabwe Times (22/5), The Financial
Gazette (24/5) and the Independent, for instance, revealed how tense
the human rights debate on Zimbabwe was and that at least five NGOs
from Zimbabwe "refused" to address the commission on
Zimbabwe's human rights situation citing security concerns.
This followed Chinamasa's branding of the organisations as
Anglo-American sponsored "regime change activists".
The Financial
Gazette, the Independent and The Zimbabwean (24/5) also highlighted
local disenchantment over the country's misrule as mirrored
by the MDC's court challenge of the country's electoral
laws and the Catholic Bishops' vow to speak out against "an
escalating wave of State-sponsored violence".
The voice distribution
of the private Press is shown in Fig 2.
Fig 2 Voice
distribution in the Private Press
Govt |
Foreign |
Alternative |
Lawyer |
Zanu
PF |
MDC |
Police |
War
veterans |
6 |
4 |
4 |
2 |
1 |
6 |
1 |
2 |
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