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Launch
of Media Council opens new front in the struggle for media freedom
Rashweat Mukundu, MISA-Zimbabwe
June 19, 2007
The launch of the Media
Council of Zimbabwe (MCZ) on 8 June 2007 spurred the struggle for
media freedom in Zimbabwe to a new pedestal from which the media
itself should be in the driving seat.
My optimism coming as
it does against the backdrop of the relentless repression against
the media and the citizens' right to freedom of expression
might easily be dismissed as naïve.
That optimism
is, however, based on the belief that the agents of change are the
oppressed themselves and not the oppressors. The MCZ, in other words,
marks the resurrection of the repressed. The MCZ is an animal described
in different terms depending on the side one belongs. Simply put,
it is a move by the media to take charge of its own affairs, to
boldly say to society we can be accountable and that media workers
can contribute to the development of the media without the chains
imposed by laws such as AIPPA.
The Zimbabwe media, be
it private or state owned has been at the receiving end of repression
resulting in the closure of four independent newspapers under a
repressive regime of state regulation and other extra judicial means.
The state media is persistently purged of dissenting voices and
has been made a shameful mouth-piece of the ruling elite.
Having the media take
the initiative through processes such as the MCZ is a way of practically
seeking media transformation, accountability and responsibility.
The MCZ will not, under the present circumstances, result in the
licensing of the Daily News, The Tribune or the Weekly Times, but
is in fact, opening a new front in dismantling the repressive media
law regime currently suffocating media development in Zimbabwe.
It might as well be true that some banned newspapers might be gone
for good but the struggle by those still operating and those banned
should set a firm and secure platform for those that will emerge
in the future.
Taking the drivers seat
in this case, is thus embarking on a long journey of seeking and
acting to influence change, for ourselves and posterity by retaining
the public's confidence in the media. The MCZ presents a chance
for media workers to unite on a common idea and broaden the struggle
for change with the support and involvement of the citizenry who
are set to benefit and use the MCZ as an amicable platform for conflict
resolution.
The mere existence of
the MCZ is a statement that the media is part of society and that
for the media to exist it needs two distinct groups: the public
and the publishers/media organisation(s). For the MCZ to work it
needs public support because the basis of its formation is to enhance
interaction with the public and amicable resolution of disputes
in a non litigation manner as opposed to what we have witnessed
under the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA).
Under the current media
laws, the media are bombed and intimidated notwithstanding the numerous
arrests of journalists. It must be emphasised that a critical missing
component in the protection of the media in Zimbabwe has been lack
of public support for media diversity. The closure of newspapers
has thus not only deprived the public access to alternative information
but subjected the population to fatal doses of government propaganda
that serves no public interest agenda.
The MCZ, it is argued,
brings the two together for a common cause on the premise that the
media belongs to the people and not to the ruling elite or the Stalinist
Ministry of Information and Publicity which spends tax payers'
money making phone calls to the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation
(ZBC) directing how stories are to be covered. The same ministry
argues that AIPPA is a law that defends 'national interests',
an obvious confusion and failure to distinguish national interests
from partisan selfish interests.
If the media belongs
to the people and media owners in their various and diverse forms
are using the public space to spread information and honestly make
a living, then it follows that the same media should be responsible
and accountable to the public. The MCZ then becomes the platform
for public and media interaction away from the dictates of policy
makers who have totally divergent interests with regard to the media
with those of both the media itself and the public.
The vociferous defense
of AIPPA as a necessary piece of legislation by the Ministry of
Information and Publicity will not abate anytime soon nor should
we be foolish to expect the policy dinosaurs in that Ministry to
change. Change will, however, come and it will come through struggle
and on our own terms. The Ministry of Information cannot change
simply because it cannot. Its political life and that of its masters
depend on repressive laws like AIPPA.
The MCZ is therefore
a tool to fight bad policy. By its very nature the MCZ cannot work
with the state-controlled Media and Information Commission (MIC)
- it cannot co-operate with AIPPA because the MCZ is an antithesis
of statutory regulation. The MCZ might fail to get the full co-operation
of all media players, which is sad, but nevertheless expected because
the dominant media is in the hands and control of the policy dinosaurs.
What has to be stated for certain though is that the MCZ is not
going to simply fade away because some 'powerful' permanent
secretary, pseudo intellectuals and soldiers running this Ministry
dislike the idea.
The same people who pride
themselves with crafting AIPPA, shutting down newspapers and causing
the near decimation of the privately owned media in Zimbabwe are
still caught up in the Stalinist era with regard to the role of
the media.
The media policy dinosaurs
within the Ministry of Information and Publicity have no tangible
or sensible reason to oppose the MCZ other than that it is not their
own initiative and secondly, it is a threat to their stranglehold
on the media and the abuse they pile week in and week out on innocent
citizens in civil society, the opposition, and private media, abusing
publications including The Herald and Sunday Mail.
What has obviously escaped
these policy dinosaurs is the movement that has taken place with
regard to media the world over. These movements include the diversification
of channels of media content distribution, demystification of the
media as a newsroom, or physical entity that can be shut, threatened,
confiscated and regulated. New technologies the world over enable
wider participation in information creation, dissemination and consumption.
This means that media regulation has to take into account the opening
up of media space to as many people as possible, whether through
personal websites, bloggs, and other online publications.
Participation in information
dissemination is no longer the responsibility of a few through regulated
media houses, but that anyone can do so freely - anyone can sell
and disseminate information. Media policy in Zimbabwe should look
at the benefits of these new technologies in social and economic
development. Media policy can, therefore, not be developed and administered
ruthlessly by a paranoid system that looks at the media as an enemy
and sees and confuses its selfish interests with national interests.
The MCZ is a statement
to say that true national interests are protected by broader participation
and involvement and not through exclusion, repression and persecution.
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