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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Price Controls and Shortages - Index of articles
Policy
contradictions and chaos
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2007-28
Monday July 16th 2007 - Sunday July 22nd 2007
July 26, 2007
THIS week the government
media failed to expose policy confusion characterising government's
price blitz and land reforms. For example, almost all the 124 stories
they carried on the clampdown on business (ZBC [54] and government
Press [70]) merely regurgitated contradictory official pronouncements
without reconciling them or matching them to reality. Consequently,
none of the reports viewed government's delays in devising
a pricing formula; its decision to hike the price of cooking oil
barely two weeks after slashing it and disagreements among officials
over the banning of fuel coupons as indicative of the chaos characterising
the price cuts policy. Such professional ineptitude was more apparent
in the official papers.
The Herald (21/7),
for example, reported that "some unknown people in Harare"
had "crafted" a "fake" Statutory
Instrument 137 of 2007 Control of Goods (Import and Export),
which they were distributing by e-mail "claiming government
intends to ban imports and exports of certain basic commodities
when government has not gazetted such a regulation". To reinforce
its claims, it quoted Industry Minister Obert Mpofu disowning the
alleged law saying government was still "deliberating"
on the statutory instrument and had not yet gazetted it.
However, the next day
The Sunday Mail reported Zimbabwe Revenue Authority official Florence
Jambwa confirming the existence of the legal instrument saying it
would be effective from August 1. The provisions of the instrument,
said Jambwa, stipulated that individuals or families "will
be allowed to import controlled goods for domestic consumption,
and not for sale, of up to a value not exceeding the equivalent
of US$250 without the need to produce a permit". Notably,
no attempt was made to relate Jambwa's claims to Mpofu's.
Earlier, The Herald (18/7)
passively reported Vice-President Joseph Msika condemning the Prices
and Incomes Stabilisation Taskforce for forcing some companies to
reduce prices to June 18th levels saying "it was not within
their mandate to do so". Citing the government-sanctioned
seed prices, which the taskforce ordered halved, Msika was quoted:
"How do you reduce prices that you (Taskforce) gave them?"
No attempt was made to interpret Msika's statements as a reflection
of the confusion surrounding government's price-cutting crusade.
The official media's
reluctance to examine official pronouncements critically saw them
also fail to discuss coherently the discord within government over
the ban of fuel coupons. For instance, they did not reconcile the
pricing taskforce's order for the disposal of fuel coupons
"within the next two weeks" (The Herald and Chronicle
19/7) with Reserve Bank Governor Gideon Gono's calls for a
revision of the policy (Chronicle 20/7). Instead, they merely quoted
him warning against "good intentions having negative results"
and urging government to "consider the reality on the ground
to avoid a situation where some of the fuel destined for legitimate
uses such as powering generators that drive banks, automated teller
machines, mines and other sectors of the economy (is not) affected
in the process".
The government Press
similarly avoided openly discussing policy contradictions that have
underlined government's land reform exercise since its inception
seven years ago.
For example, The Herald
(19/7) did not relate Msika's statement that government "did
not say whites should be chased (from farms) but wanted a fair distribution
of land" to reality. But while the official Press passively
reported such conflicting policy statements, ZBC simply ignored
them, preferring to give a sanitised picture of the price blitz.
It is against this background
that although the government media's sourcing patterns appeared
diverse as shown in Figs 1 and 2, their coverage of the topic remained
superficial.
Fig.1 Voice
distribution in government Press
Govt |
Business |
Alternative |
Unnamed |
Judiciary |
Police |
Lawyers |
Ordinary
people |
36 |
12 |
14 |
13 |
6 |
4 |
4 |
3 |
Fig. 2 Voice
distribution on ZBC
| Station |
Govt |
Business |
Alternative |
Police |
Zanu
PF |
| ZTV |
2 |
9 |
6 |
4 |
1 |
| Spot FM |
3 |
5 |
4 |
6 |
3 |
| Radio Zimbabwe |
1 |
3 |
4 |
4 |
3 |
| Total |
6 |
17 |
14 |
14 |
7 |
In contrast,
the private media highlighted this policy confusion in 38 stories.
Of these, 24 were in the private papers and the remainder in the
private electronic media. The Zimbabwe Independent (20/2), for instance,
interpreted Msika's critical remarks on land reforms as an
admission that the programme was chaotic and had "destroyed
commercial agriculture". In fact, in another story the paper
revealed that despite Msika's claims that the land reform
"policy document didn't say all white farmers should
be chased out", the police had evicted "one of the last
white commercial farmers in Matebeleland North", Margaret
Joubert, "in contempt of a High Court order interdicting them
from disrupting operations at the farm".
New Zimbabwe.com (19/7)
also reported that the authorities had "given the . . . last
remaining white commercial farmers notices to leave their farms
by September 30". The Zimbabwe Times (19/7) revealed that
there was also confusion regarding the status of black-owned farms
with two senior government officials bickering over the planned
acquisition of Nuanetsi Ranch owned by former PF ZAPU members. Reportedly,
Msika had threatened to resign if Masvingo governor Willard Chiwewe
went ahead with plans to resettle people on the ranch, arguing that
it was pointless to "take land from a black man and give it
to another."
By the weekend, The Standard
(22/7) reported more confusion in government policies in its story
about Mpofu denying government's earlier announcement outlawing
the use of fuel coupons. It quoted him claiming that his statement
had been "misinterpreted" as government was not scrapping
the facility altogether. Instead, he said, the National Oil Company
of Zimbabwe would be the sole company responsible for selling fuel
and "would continue to service those who failed to redeem
coupons within the two weeks". How this would be done he did
not say. Neither was he asked. The paper also revealed that despite
Mpofu's earlier attempts to disown the law banning imports
of groceries, he had actually "recalled" the statutory
instrument in order to study it and "see how it affect(ed) . . . people".
Mpofu claimed that it "was an old instrument, which had been
discussed a long time ago".
The private media's
voice distribution is shown in Figs 3 and 4.
Fig. 3 Voice
distribution on the private electronic media
Govt |
Business |
Zanu
PF |
Police |
Alternative |
3 |
4 |
3 |
1 |
4 |
Fig 4 Voice
distribution for private Press
Government |
Alternative |
Business |
Unnamed |
Ordinary
people |
Police |
Farmers |
2 |
3 |
10 |
9 |
2 |
1 |
1 |
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