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Shortage
of newsprint
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update
2008-4
Monday January 28th – Sunday February 3rd 2008
MMPZ notes with concern the latest threat
to the survival of the already frail local print media following
news that production of newsprint at the country’s biggest manufacturer
had nosedived to 30 percent due to power cuts, coal and foreign
currency shortages.
The Financial Gazette (31/1) reported
ART Corporation executives, owners of paper manufacturer Mutare
Board and Paper Mills, as having told the Information Ministry and
newspaper industry executives how the latest power outages had "resulted
in a no-stock situation" at the company, "with
output falling to levels that cannot even satisfy the domestic market".
The paper cited company insiders saying that even if ZESA restored
power at MBPM, foreign currency shortages would still cripple the
importation of pulp needed for the production of newsprint. The
Gazette also cited the insiders claiming that Hwange Colliery
had indicated that "it was only able to supply a few
wagons of coal, which is not enough to power the plant".
Such a crippling restriction on the free
flow of information does indeed represent a crisis in Zimbabwe’s
already devastated media landscape, especially now, in the countdown
to the March 29 harmonised elections. The media are an essential
part of the election process, disseminating critical election information
to voters. The current newsprint shortage however, severely undermines
the media’s critical role as messenger to the nation resulting in
an alarming information drought. Newspapers have become thinner
and print runs, especially of the government dailies, have been
slashed. Justin Mutasa, Group CEO of Zimpapers, publishers of the
government-controlled Herald and Chronicle, is on record saying
they have been receiving "totally inadequate"
quantities of newsprint. This is reflected by the scarcity of newspapers,
and with insiders at Zimpapers placing The Herald’s print-run
at below 20 000 copies a day, this has seriously undermined the
rights of the electorate to be informed about pertinent issues regarding
the March elections.
For example the supplement placed by
the Registrar-General’s office in the government dailies (31/1)
containing crucial information on the location of voters’ roll inspection
centres and documents required for registration, cannot have reached
a significant number of the electorate thereby creating the possibility
of disenfranchising many potential voters, especially given the
short period allowed for the inspection of the rolls.
Such a crisis in the industry further
erodes the possibility of creating a conducive climate for the staging
of a free and fair election.
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