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Government
boost propaganda project as 'rural Information Officers'
are deployed
MISA-Zimbabwe
September 19, 2007
The government is set
to deploy 60 'Information Officers' under the Zimbabwe
Information Service (ZIS) by November 2007 to facilitate news dissemination
from the rural areas. ZIS is a defunct Ministry of Information and
Publicity news agency meant to convey government information in
rural areas and vice versa. ZIS was active in the 1980s and has
existed only in name since then.
In an address to Harare
Polytechnic School of Journalism students on 14 September 2007,
the acting Director for Rural Communication in the Ministry of Information
and Publicity, Regis Chikowore, stated that currently there are
38 information officers operating in selected parts of the country,
with the number expected to rise to 60 by November 2007. According
to the Ministry this move will ensure that all the rural districts
are manned by information officers.
The acting Director went
on to state that besides news dissemination, the information officers
would be liable for revitalizing the operation of the mobile video
units to be used to breach the rural- urban digital divide.
He highlighted that presently,
the government is mobilizing resources to set up rural information
centers and mobile units which would be used to address the information
and communication needs of rural people.
Speaking on the same
issue during the official launch of the National Information Communication
Technology (ICT) Policy Framework by President Robert Mugabe in
Harare, the Minister of Information and Publicity, Sikhanyiso Ndlovu,
said the information centers would be rural-based multimedia platforms
which the government intends to avail to rural communities.
MISA-Zimbabwe expresses
concern that the sudden realization of the need for information
distribution in rural areas is a sinister ploy to flood rural communities
with ruling party campaign materials disguised as information towards
the 2008 elections. This fear is based on the current skewed and
biased coverage of issues by the state controlled media. MISA-Zimbabwe
further expresses surprise that at a time when national institutions
including the state broadcaster, the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation
are struggling financially the Ministry has resources to pour into
the defunct ZIS. This project therefore raises serious questions
on its sincerity and anticipated benefits to rural communities long
cut off from access to information.
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