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International
relations
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2007-46
Monday November 19th - Sunday November 25th 2007
November 29, 2007
The official media continued
to give distorted and simplistic explanations on why government
had become an object of international rebuke in 53 stories they
carried on the subject: ZBC [28] and government papers [25]. This
was illustrated by the way they deliberately misrepresented international
concern over government's political and economic policies
and its poor human rights record with conspiracy theories that dismissed
these issues as hypocritical and aimed at promoting Britain's
alleged "illegal" regime change agenda. As a result,
there was no coherent discussion on the root causes and multifaceted
nature of the fall-out.
Instead, they presented
the problems as instigated exclusively by Britain as a reprisal
for government's violent agrarian reforms that dispossessed
white commercial farmers. It was in this context that The Herald
(23/11) passively reported President Mugabe as having "roasted"
incoming Australian ambassador to Zimbabwe, Charles Hodgson, on
why his country "gets involved in the bilateral dispute between
Zimbabwe and Britain" during the presentation of his credentials
to Mugabe. Earlier, ZBC's reporter Judith Makwanya simply
amplified Mugabe's sentiments by claiming that relations between
the two countries had "soured in recent years following Australia's
decision to support Britain over the land question in Zimbabwe"
(ZTV and Spot FM, 22/11,8pm).
The Herald (23/11) also
reported that Mugabe had quizzed Hodgson on why Australia "makes
a lot of noise" about Zimbabwe's human rights record
"yet Harare was far ahead of Canberra in upholding human rights
given the way Aborigines are treated in Australia". However,
no facts comparing the two countries' human rights records
were provided. Neither did the paper seek Hodgson's view of
this opinion.
The government media
also contrived facts to discredit incoming US ambassador to Zimbabwe,
James McGee. For example, while The Herald (23/11) reported him
promising to work with the "government and people of Zimbabwe"
during confirmation of his appointment, it claimed that soon afterwards
McGee had told his country's Senate that he would continue
from where his predecessor, Christopher Dell, "left in pursuing
the regime change agenda in Zimbabwe". Nowhere was McGee quoted
saying this.
ZTV and Spot FM (22/11,8pm)
did not perform any better. They merely perpetuated the notion that
US ambassadors were unruly, alleging that Dell had left the country
"without bidding farewell" to Mugabe following "a
series of incidents of confrontations with the laws of the land
and the government of Zimbabwe".
Similar distorted reporting
characterized the official media's coverage of the international
debate on the merits of inviting Mugabe to December's EU-Africa
summit in Portugal.
They only reported approvingly
of world sentiment favouring his attendance while rubbishing alternative
views. In fact, the government media reports merely glossed over
the authorities' pariah status with positive comments from
'friendly' countries and no attempt to rationalize the
matter. In this context The Herald and Chronicle (24/11) prominently
reported Namibian Health Minister Richard Kamwi saying SADC had
"resolved that I affirm that we stand by Zimbabwe" and
called for the "immediate lifting of sanctions imposed on
our sister country" during the launch of the SADC Malaria
Week. No attempt was made to point out that only Zimbabwe's
ruling elite was under sanctions and not the whole country.
The government media
also failed to fully inform their audiences on the progress of the
SADC-led mediation efforts between ZANU-PF and the MDC to resolve
the country's crisis or censored reports that the talks could
collapse. Instead of investigating the purpose of South African
leader Thabo Mbeki's visit to Harare and what he discussed
at separate meetings with President Mugabe and MDC faction leaders
Morgan Tsvangirai and Arthur Mutambara, they only relied on official
statements predicting a favourable outcome of the talks. ZTV and
Radio Zimbabwe (22/11, 8pm) and The Herald (23/11), for example,
passively quoted Mbeki saying he was "optimistic that the
outcome of his facilitation in the dialogue . . . will be positive"
without seeking comment from the MDC to establish their opinion
of the progress being made.
Figs 1and 2 show the
voice distribution of the government media.
Fig 1: Voice
distribution on ZBC
Govt |
Foreign
dignitaries |
Alternative |
Zanu
PF |
12 |
19 |
8 |
4 |
Fig 2: Voice
distribution in the government Press
Govt |
Alternative |
Foreign
dignitaries |
MDC |
Media |
10 |
2 |
9 |
1 |
1 |
Only the private media
exposed growing international pressure on government to reform in
the 39 stories they carried on the topic. Twenty-eight of these
appeared in the private electronic media and 11 in the private Press.
The Zimbabwe Independent, for example, reported that South African
President Thabo Mbeki had "piled pressure" on Mugabe
to speed up the pace of the talks between his party and the MDC
after having missed deadlines in September, October and November.
Reportedly, Mbeki indicated that he wanted to report as soon as
possible to the SADC troika on politics, defence and security and
hence wanted the talks to be finalized by the first week of December.
Contrary to the impression
given by the government media that the dialogue was proceeding smoothly,
the private media reported that they were in fact dogged with problems.
For example, SW Radio Africa (23/11) revealed that the representative
of the Tsvangirai faction in the talks, Tendai Biti, "walked
out" of a meeting held three weeks ago and had been refusing
to take part in the talks unless ZANU-PF "ends its orgy of
violence". Earlier, ZimOnline (19/11) reported Tsvangirai
"urging Mbeki to pressure Mugabe to end political violence".
SW Radio Africa (20/11), Studio 7 (19/11) and the Independent carried
similar stories.
And unlike the
opinionated coverage of McGee's comments by the official media,
the Independent cited him saying the US remained "committed
to seeing free and fair elections next year through which the people
of Zimbabwe can express their will".
Moreover, Studio 7 (20/11)
and The Zimbabwean (22/11) revealed that the EU had agreed to have
the human rights situation in Zimbabwe put on the agenda for the
Portuguese summit so as to send a "clear and tough"
message to Mugabe on his misrule. The private media's critical
coverage of the topic was illustrated by their sourcing patterns,
which sought diverse views as shown in Figs 2 and 3.
Fig 3: Voice
distribution of the private electronic media
Govt |
Foreign
dignitaries |
Alternative |
MDC |
Lawyers |
3 |
13 |
9 |
11 |
1 |
Fig 4: Voice
distribution in the private Press
Govt |
Foreign
dignitaries |
MDC |
Editorials |
3 |
5 |
4 |
3 |
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