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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Media
freedom: Lessons from Zimbabwe
Hilary Kundishora
Extracted from Pambazuka News 356
March 26, 2008
http://pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/46657
The electronic and print
media in other value driven and politically mature societies, has
acted as the free marketplace of ideas, and as such there is a direct
and general causal link between economic prosperity and media freedom
with the exception of China, but nevertheless the success story
of China does not mean to undermine the causal link prevalent in
much of the third and first word nations. The existence of this
unique relationship consequently raises an important thesis about
economic development and it elucidates a secret for development,
which has been the magic for economic prosperity in first world
economies.
The media has formed
an important source of a knowledge structure, which has unfortunately
in some instances in history been manipulated to favour the interests
of a minority and selfish click. And as such the knowledge structure
has formed an important power structure most widely sought through
hook and crook and in the case of Zimbabwe all tricks including
unorthodox means have been elicited in order to control the media
for selfish reasons remotely connected to national interests.
Media freedom in much
of colonial Africa was designed by architects of the colonial establishment
with a sinister agenda which was however meant to advance the cause
of racial apartheid and with the advent of independence, Africa
sought to open all the secret cardboards stocked with skeletons
for the world to see. Zimbabwe like other postcolonial states also
opened up to scrutiny thus widely embracing values of accountability
as opposed to privacy.
It is interesting to
note that with the leaderships increasing variance from the values
that underpinned the liberation struggle in Zimbabwe the postcolonial
leadership ironically later made use of the same tools box which
they despised and had fought hard against, to some extent there
were now selling out the cause of the struggle for personal and
selfish interests devoid of national interests. The ruling party
has used its political muscle to manipulate, barn and restrict access
to information it considers informing to the general public, in
case the public will be able make other choices for the betterment
of their destiny.
It is in this context
that the birth of an over regulated and partisan media industry,
and archaic legislations designed to emasculate the media should
be viewed as the rise of the devouring demons. Like demons they
consume all the good while leaving everything around in a bad state,
and Zimbabwe's state media case is in most way similar to a demon
afflicted individual. The end of freedom has given birth to a media
which militates against the moral value systems on which independence
was based upon, the media is now used as a tool to devour the very
people it was supposed to develop and assist.
State resources have
been poured to the advantage, favouring sectoral interests, partisan
and ZANU PF interests in general to the extent that the level of
misinformation in Zimbabwe leaves a lot to be desired. Worse still
the propaganda continuum is reflective from the lowest ranking officials
to the highest office in the land thus the media has been guilty
of complicity and not probing issues while acting as a mental inflicting
venom which subject people to massive cognitive bias.
It is important that
intellectuals and scholars take stock of events in Zimbabwe so that
they realise the role the state media has played in undermining
the rule of law and natural justice. Instead of acting as a repository
and curator of the rule of law and natural justice the press has
been used to churn propaganda which if consumed is damaging to the
recipients and the very national interests / sovereignty it purports
to protect. The Rwandan genocide provides the testimony of how an
equally irresponsible media can be so dangerous to the people it
is meant to develop, like an weapon the media is a dangerous tool
if in the hands of misguided and immoral people who value selfish
interests and Rwanda's genocide offers much convincing testimony
to this thesis.
If the state media could
one day cease to be a tool furthering private interest and pursue
a more inclusive approach which is national than sectoral, issues
could be debated and scrutinised while it is acting as marketplace
for ideas crucial in informing policy formulation and implementation.
The state media could then act as a watchdog of national interests-not
interests of cronies but interests favouring even vulnerable members
of society. In normal democracies through this way the media acts
as a more reliable source of information for scholars, researchers
and investors thus exhibiting and playing a causal link to economic
development.
As the March 29 elections
approach the state media has been conspicuous in churning out hate
speech which is more sectoral than uniting in the face of crucial
elections which are important in locating the compass which will
be used in directing the country to prosperity. It is in this context
that the role of the media in misinforming voters must not be left
unchallenged, instead of responsibly reporting and offering all
aspirants of public office equal chance to attract voters as is
happening in America where Obama and Clinton are contesting without
vilifying one another, the state media is busy presenting only the
ruling party as the only peoples viable choice notwithstanding the
damage it has caused to the collective aspirations of a people.
Simba Makoni a new and
promising baby in opposition politics has of late been linked to
the West and like Tsvangirai his predecessor they both have been
branded sell-outs and an agents of imperialism, worse still Makoni
has publicly been likened to a bull frog and a prostitute, of which
prostitutes in the African context are heavily despised as immoral
as they fall outside the mainstream of society. And for the state
media it is fascinating that they have never bothered to unpack
why Makoni has been a darling of ZANU PF for the past years yet
today they accuse him of political promiscuity, only because he
has refused to enter the books history for the wrong reasons and
as such he has parted ways with the party that nurtured him.
In any other democratic
country the ruling party will have been grilled as to what new there
are offering to the people after presiding over the death of a once
vibrant economy but alas there are the worst but being presented
as the best in the general election. This raises the role of the
state media in my thesis of a causal link between media freedom
and economic prosperity and it indicts the state media for misinforming
and diverting people from the real issues that must form the foundation
for debate and consequently the election of public office bearers
into public office. The diminished media freedom is responsible
creating an atmosphere conducive for the proliferation of a kleptocracy,
which has run down an economy once prosperous.
Like the annihilation
of property rights, the level of media freedom is directly related
to the decadence and the thesis further calls upon all loving and
spiritual connected citizens to work extra hard to create a media
which is free and accessible which consequently act as a source
of reliable information and a curator of the peoples rights. The
presents of an election offer the masses of Zimbabwe a chance of
renewal and to choose the path to prosperity or continue the present
path of doom, and for those in dire need of economic revival it
is also indispensable that there be a free media in order that we
achieve a stable economy. In fact it is crucial that we revert back
to valuing the constitution, which is the supreme document that
governs and lays out the rule law and freedom of expression as a
corner stone for economic prosperity.
*Hillary Kundishora is a scholar of strategic management. You can
visit his blog at http://www.zimchaiyo.blogspot.com
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.
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