|
Back to Index
Political
developments
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2007-47
Monday November 26th - Sunday December 2nd 2007
December 06, 2007
This week the
government media gave a highly partisan picture of ZANU PF's
popularity and the causes behind Zimbabwe's fallout with Western
democracies in 95 stories they carried on the subject. Of these
45 appeared on ZBC and 50 in the official papers. The heavy coverage
indicates the importance the government attached to disseminating
this perspective. The bias was reflected in the way these media
paid glowing tribute to ZANU-PF's million-man march, organised
by the party's former liberation fighters, in support of President
Mugabe's candidature in next year's elections.
ZBC aptly illustrated
this devotion to reporting the event in a context favourable to
President Mugabe by allowing ZTV alone to dedicate 47 minutes (66%)
of the one hour and 11 minutes it devoted to its news coverage of
the country's political developments in the week to the march.
In addition,
ZBC abruptly suspended its normal programming (ZTV, Spot FM and
Radio Zimbabwe) to feature live the subsequent four-hour rally after
the march. At least 20 minutes of this time was dedicated to covering
numerous party officials shouting slogans denigrating the opposition
MDC and its alleged Western masters for plotting 'illegal'
regime change. This overkill did not translate into informed coverage
of the occasion. For example, there was no effort to critically
analyse the essence of Mugabe's one-and-half-hour speech,
which basically amplified the party's criticism of the West
and the MDC as the sole causes of the country's problems.
Instead, the
government media narrowly projected the march as a national event
that had the support of every Zimbabwean without giving a coherent
explanation of its objectives and relevance.
For example,
there was no honest discussion on why Zimbabweans were being compelled
to back Mugabe's presidential candidacy publicly if his party
had already 'unanimously nominated' him in March, as
the official media had previously claimed, or why the endorsement
had to be done outside formal party structures. These media also
made no effort to question the abuse of public resources by the
party to support Mugabe's candidature. Neither did they interpret
this as a clear illustration of how the distinction between government
and the ruling party has been so badly eroded. There was also no
effort to explain why the police so avidly participated in this
public demonstration when they violently put an end to a court-sanctioned
civic rally in Highfield last March and brutally assaulted opposition
and civic leaders in detention.
The government
media also clearly inflated the number of people who attended the
rally as a way of proving its success. For example, while a ZTV
reporter (30/11,8pm), claimed that the event had attracted "more
than one million people", The Herald (1/12) allowed war veterans
chairman Jabulani Sibanda to make similar grossly inflated claims,
while providing only vague attendance figures of its own. It was
in this context that the government media projected the 'successful'
holding of the march as a clear statement against the West's
alleged 'illegal' regime change agenda in the country.
For example, while The Herald (30/11) claimed the "march and
gathering is like a throwback to January 1980 because the setting
and circumstances are the same . . . the British are at it again,
funding a proxy opposition in an attempt to torpedo the people's
revolution", ZBC's Judith Makwanya, said the march was
a "statement to the world that ZANU PF is here to stay"
(Spot FM, 30/11).
The government
media also highlighted the region's continued defence of Zimbabwe's
attendance at the EU-Africa summit and interpreted the refusal to
have the country's human rights record discussed there as
a victory. They also celebrated the call by Senegalese leader, Abdoulaye
Wade, for the lifting of the West's targeted sanctions following
his unsuccessful effort to convince ZANU PF and MDC to agree to
involve more African leaders to help negotiate a settlement in the
country. Notably, no activities of opposition parties were reported
in the government papers except in the context of the MDC's
alleged machinations to destabilise the country. In fact, a The
Herald (30/11) cartoon seemed to incite violence against MDC leader
Morgan Tsvangirai by warning him to "avoid" the routes
ZANU-PF marchers were going to use.
The government
media' superficial coverage of the topic was reflected by
its selective sourcing, which mainly targeted ruling party opinion
or those closely linked to the party. See Figs 1and 2.
Fig 1: Voice
distribution on ZBC
Government |
Zanu
PF |
War
vets |
ZFTU |
Foreign
dignitaries |
Ordinary
people |
Police |
14 |
43 |
10 |
1 |
13 |
1 |
3 |
Fig: 2 Voice
distribution in the government Press
Govt |
Zanu
PF |
Alternative |
War
vets |
Ordinary
people |
Foreign
diplomats |
Police |
MDC |
16 |
28 |
5 |
5 |
4 |
10 |
2 |
2 |
Only the private
media tried to give an independent perspective of the march and
of Harare's strained relations with the international community
in the 51 reports they carried (private electronic media [26] and
private papers [25]). They questioned the purpose of the march,
which they linked to ZANU PF's succession issue and as a ploy
to confer Mugabe with life presidency. The private media also reported
on how a variety of national resources, including the national railways
and various forms of public road transport, had been commandeered
to ensure the success of the rally. They also reported that many
people had allegedly been forced into participating. For example,
The Standard (1/12) carried a picture of an empty Mupedzanhamo flea
market in Mbare, saying vendors had been warned they risked losing
their stalls if they did not attend. But it also quoted Sibanda
denying this.
Earlier, The
Financial Gazette (29/11) quoted analyst Eldred Masunungure querying
why the war veterans were still pushing for Mugabe's candidacy
when "pretenders" to his job had already "thrown
in the towel". However, the private media provided wildly
differing figures for the number of people who attended the event.
For example, while Zimdaily (30/11) estimated the number at about
100 000, New Zimbabwe.com (30/11) put the figure at 500 000. The
private media also reported Mugabe as under continued pressure from
the international community to resolve Zimbabwe's crisis.
In fact, the
Gazette reported Mugabe as having asked incoming US envoy James
McGee to help improve relations between the two countries when the
American presented his credentials - as far cry from The Herald's
report of his arrival, and its racist and offensive leader page
comment likening him to a "house negro" of the American
administration.
Figs 3 and 4
show the sourcing patterns of the private media.
Fig 3: Voice
distribution in the private electronic media
Govt |
Alternative |
Zanu
PF |
War
vets |
MDC |
Opposition |
Foreign
dignitaries |
Unnamed |
8 |
10 |
1 |
6 |
6 |
1 |
9 |
2 |
Fig 4: Voice
distribution in the private papers
Govt |
Zanu
PF |
Alternative |
War
vets |
MDC |
Other
opposition |
Foreign
diplomats |
Unnamed |
1 |
9 |
3 |
1 |
5 |
2 |
6 |
10 |
Visit the MMPZ
fact
sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|