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Censorship
and inadequate news coverage
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2007-41
Monday October 15th - Sunday October 21st 2007
October 25, 2007
The government media
failed to holistically report pertinent political and economic developments
in the country during the week. Although they carried 43 stories
(ZBC [11] and government papers [32]) on these issues, they failed
to give informed updates on the authorities' preparations
for next year's harmonised elections and the extent to which
hyperinflation and poor service delivery, characterised by incessant
water and power cuts, had negatively affected the country.
The government media's
poor showing was underlined by their censorship of human rights
abuses against perceived government opponents, allegedly committed
by state security agents in most cases. Apart from their apparent
indifferent treatment of electoral issues, the private media fared
better and gave more comprehensive coverage of the economic and
political crises troubling the country. This was reflected in the
68 reports they carried on these issues. Of these, 30 were in the
private electronic media and 38 in private papers.
a) The
blackout - and inflation
Despite the country's
capital continuing to suffer for a second week from what must evidently
have been the most extensive and persistent power failure the city
has ever experienced, the government media incredibly all but ignored
the crisis that forced shops and industries to close, and witnessed
powerless hospitals transferring critical patients and supplies
to "areas of safety". For example, ZTV (17/10, 6pm)
and Spot FM (17/10, 8pm) waited for nearly 10 days before simply
citing a statement by the Zimbabwe Electricity Supply Authority
attributing the loss of power to more than 25 Harare suburbs to
cable faults and vandalism. The government papers simply pretended
the self-evident crisis did not exist.
The Sunday Mail
Metro (21/10) even reduced the power shortages - that have
also resulted in the widespread use of firewood - to a comedy
by giving the impression that people were now using "bonfires"
because they were fashionable and rekindled the tradition of story-telling.
No effort was made by these media to hold ZESA or government to
account for the blackout, or to demand some solution, or even to
assess the cost and extent of the crisis.
The pattern remained
unbroken in the government's coverage of the ongoing water
crisis and the rise in inflation, up to another record high of 7
982 percent in September.
ZBC completely ignored
reporting the new inflation figures, while The Herald and Chronicle
(18/10) buried the news in their business sections.
Altogether, these media
carried 31 reports on these issues (ZBC [11] and government Press
[20]), mainly based on official pronouncements and devoid of information
that could have been useful to the public.
Only the private media
provided a critical perspective of the issues in their 23 reports
on these topics (11 in the private electronic media and 12 in the
private Press).
Not only did they highlight
the disastrous effects of the continuing power failure, they predicted
worsening power shortages due to plummeting local electricity production
as well as government's failure to raise the cash to pay for
imports.
In addition, they reported
the rise in inflation and attempted to explain its causes and its
effects on the economy.
b) Human
rights violations
The government media
completely ignored cases of human rights violations allegedly committed
by state security agents and ZANU PF youths against perceived government
opponents. As a result, their audiences remained ignorant of these
developments, which were only reported in the private media.This
week they recorded 15 fresh incidents of rights abuses, including
one murder, and the assault, arrest and harassment of mostly civic
rights activists, students and members of the MDC. In one incident,
the online publication Zimbabwe Times (15/10), Studio 7 (16/10)
and The Standard reported the death of an MDC member, Fibion Mafukidze,
from injuries sustained after he was allegedly assaulted by soldiers
and ZANU PF youths in Gutu recently.
The Zimbabwe Times also
reported Maxwell Mazambani (last year's MDC candidate for
Ward Five in Gutu in last year's elections) as battling for
his life at a private Harare hospital after being "brutally"
assaulted allegedly by soldiers and ZANU PF activists on September
25. Mazambani, whose kidneys were reportedly damaged, was reported
to have been abducted from his rural home by "six soldiers
and three others" driving "a white Nissan truck that
belongs to the wife of Finance Minister Samuel Mumbengegwi"
and "viciously assaulted at Eastdale Farm".
It was against this background
that the Gazette and The Zimbabwean reported the MDC as having threatened
to pull out of the SADC-led talks between their party and ZANU PF
citing "escalating violence" against its supporters.
The papers reported the opposition party claiming it had recorded
4 122 human rights violations between January and June this year,
which included seven murders and 18 cases of rape. In addition,
it alleged police had disrupted 103 of its rallies since April.
c) Elections
In view of the fact that
four elections are due to be held at once early next year (parliamentary,
presidential, the Senate and municipal elections), none of the media
have begun to investigate how the Electoral Commission is going
to manage such a complex process. The government has not provided
the electorate with any useful information about the delimitation
of constituency and ward boundaries, which will radically change
due to the increase in the number of constituencies and the expansion
of municipal boundaries, and how this will have a bearing on the
voters' rolls and registration.
Almost all the 11 stories
the government media carried on electoral issues were passive reports
of official pronouncements declaring preparations as being "on
course" without any effort to verify such claims.For example,
The Herald and Chronicle (16/10) suffocated revelations before a
Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Public Accounts by the Zimbabwe
Electoral Commission (ZEC) that they faced a host of problems ahead
of the polls.Chief among these, said ZEC, was inadequate funding,
critical shortage of vehicles, fuel, and manpower. The papers also
failed to clarify the continued role of the Registrar-General's
office in the running of elections, except to carry even more confusing
revelations by a ZEC official that their election materials and
assets were "still in the hands" of that office.
There was no clear explanation
either on the reasons behind the sudden introduction of a new mobile
voter registration exercise. ZTV (17/10, 6pm), Spot FM (18/10, 8pm)
and The Herald and Chronicle (19/10) confined themselves to passively
reporting the R-G, Tobaiwa Mudede, saying the three-week programme
was a "mop-up" exercise "targeting areas that
were not covered satisfactorily" in the previous registration
exercise because of "various reasons". The stations
did not ask him to identify the sidelined areas and why they had
been overlooked in the first place, especially as his office had
previously claimed that the exercise had been conducted successfully.
Instead of asking the
electoral authorities sensible questions about what they were doing
to ensure that Voting Day for the four simultaneous elections would
not become a repeat of the chaotic polling exercise of the 2002
presidential and mayoral elections, the government media focused
their attention on ZANU PF's campaign activities while ignoring
those of its political opponents. For example, ZBC carried 12 reports
on the campaign activities of the ruling party and none on the opposition
MDC. In addition, these reports suppressed news of any dissent within
the party over President Mugabe's candidacy in next year's
presidential poll. The private media were equally uninformative
about the electoral processes.
Except for two reports:
one by Studio 7 (17/10) that quoted a Zimbabwe Election Support
Network (ZESN) official noting the limited time left for effective
"election reform and logistical preparations for elections
to be free and fair; and another on a voter education campaign by
Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition (The Zimbabwean 18/10), nothing else
was said on the matter. Otherwise, the rest of the 14 reports these
media carried basically focused on in-house fighting within the
ruling party and the Morgan Tsvangirai-led MDC. For example, The
Financial Gazette (18/10), the Zimbabwe Independent (19/10) and
ZimOnline, reported the escalation of tensions in ZANU PF over ongoing
'national' marches by war veterans in support of Mugabe's
presidential candidature ahead of the party's congress in
December. The Standard (21/10) reported rifts in the Tsvangirai
MDC formation following its dissolution of the Women's assembly
led by Lucia Matibenga.
The difference in the
way the official and private media handled these topics is illustrated
by the way the government papers and the private electronic media
sourced their comments. See Figs 1 and 2.
Fig 1: Voice
distribution in the official papers
Government |
Alternative |
Zanu
PF |
Electoral |
Judiciary |
19 |
4 |
8 |
8 |
1 |
While the official
papers reported the issues mostly through the lens of the authorities,
the private electronic media used alternative voices to interrogate
the soundness of government pronouncements.
Fig 2: Voice
distribution in the private electronic media
Govt |
Alternative |
War
Vets |
Lawyers |
MDC |
Zanu
PF |
Ordinary
People |
Professional |
6 |
15 |
4 |
8 |
6 |
1 |
2 |
1 |
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