|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Daily
Media Update No.14
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
April 02, 2008
MMPZ's daily media
updates monitor the output of the domestic print and electronic
media, particularly relating to coverage of election issues. Monitoring
of the national public broadcaster, ZBC, is confined mostly to the
main news bulletins on television and its two main radio stations,
Spot FM and Radio Zimbabwe, although prime-time programmes containing
political content or material relevant to last week's national
elections is also monitored in a separate report. (This includes
prime-time political advertising on ZBC). In addition, the main
evening news bulletins of two privately owned radio stations broadcasting
into Zimbabwe from abroad are monitored, Studio 7 and SW Radio Africa,
together with the "news" pages of four web-based online
news agencies specializing in news about Zimbabwe
Daily print
media report - Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008
Summary
For the
first time since the close of voting on Saturday night, the government-controlled
newspapers reported the possibility of a run-off for the presidential
election between ZANU PF's President Mugabe and the MDC's
Morgan Tsvangirai.
The Herald and Chronicle
cited "the pattern of results in the presidential election
show that none of the candidates will garner more than 50 percent
of the vote . . . "
By reporting this, the
papers clearly suggested that initial results for that election
were known, but did not investigate this aspect. Instead, they confused
the issue by citing "analysts" projecting that "the
pattern of results" in the House of Assembly poll "was
pointing to a run-off in the presidential poll."
Their reports on the
ongoing vote count were mostly restricted to passively conveying
official pronouncements, which avoided addressing the only question
consuming the nation's thoughts: why the delayed and seemingly
stage-managed release of the election results?
The two dailies carried
20 stories on the elections, nine of which were on administrative
issues and eight on warnings against politically motivated violence.
While the papers carried
straightforwardly passive news reports on officials and foreign
observers appealing for peace during the election period, they also
carried two editorial features that portrayed the MDC as a violent
party.
Election
administration
Apart from their stories about the possibility of a run-off, the
government dailies' four reports on the vote-counting process
were mostly reported through the eyes of the Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission.
One of these, in The
Herald, carried the misleading headline: Parties agree on presidential
poll results, which merely cited ZEC chief elections officer Lovemore
Sekeramayi announcing that ZANU PF and the MDC (Tsvangirai) faction
had agreed that the "verification and collation of the presidential
results would commence in the presence of their candidates or chief
election agents, before announcement".
The story did not link
this to the controversy haunting ZEC's slow release of the
results, which has given rise to growing public concern and speculation
of possible rigging. However, it did report Tsvangirai telling a
Press briefing that his party had compiled its own election results
but " . . . would wait for ZEC before we discuss the circumstances
of the final result..."
The Herald's lead
story, which carried the suggestion of a presidential run-off, focused
mainly on the fact that the two main contesting parties were "heading
for a tie" in the House of Assembly contest, but ignored the
fact that the combined opposition MDC actually gave them a lead
of four seats in the 160 House of Assembly results ZEC had released
by 10pm the previous night. Of these, ZANU had won 78 seats, 77
for MDC (Tsvangirai) and MDC-Mutambara (five). Notably, The Herald
again carried a full-page tabulated list of 176 House of Assembly
results on its inside pages that upstaged the "news"
on its front page.
A colourful picture of
fist-waving ZANU PF supporters celebrating the victory of their
Masvingo South constituency candidate dominated the front page.
The rest of
the government papers' stories on the administration of the
elections passively reported more commendations of the election
process by foreign observer missions, such as COMESA and the Centre
for Peace Initiatives in Africa.
Political violence
The Herald and Chronicle recorded no new cases of political violence
in the nine stories they carried on the subject.
However, they ran follow-ups
on yesterday's coverage of clashes between supporters of the
two MDC factions in St Mary's by reporting on the court appearance
of seven activists from the Tsvangirai faction accused of being
responsible for the violence.
In addition, The Herald
carried two editorial opinions, one of which was a quasi-religious
diatribe "By a God-fearing Correspondent", that attempted
to discredit the MDC and portray it as a violent party.
The other editorial had
a similar objective and resurrected old lies peddled by the government
media last year to support this argument, accusing the West of favouring
Tsvangirai "as if he is not the same person who plotted an
assassination of Zimbabwe's president as a prelude to war;
as if it is not unusual for Tsvangirai to be flanked by young thugs
from urban areas who just over a year ago went on a terrorising
spree . . . fire bombing houses, kombis, police dormitories, and
attacking citizens and police in the streets".
The voice distribution
for the official dailies is illustrated in Fig. 1
Fig 1: Voice distribution in The Herald and Chronicle
| ZANU PF |
MDC |
ZEC |
ZRP |
Foreign
Diplomats |
Lawyers |
Professionals |
Traditional
Leaders |
1 |
2 |
4 |
3 |
2 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
Daily electronic media
report - Tuesday, April 1st 2008
Summary
The national public broadcaster relied solely on official explanations
for the delay in publicizing the results of the weekend's
harmonized elections, particularly the presidential ballot.
The focus on all of ZBC's
news bulletins continued to be the verdict of observer missions
who described the polls as free and fair, which they reported on
prominently.
But they failed to balance
these opinions with publicly expressed concerns about the electoral
process.
This was reflected in
the 14 reports they carried on the topic.
The private electronic
media's 23 reports on these issues compared the execution
of the electoral authorities with regional and international standards
for holding democratic elections. They questioned the Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission's late announcement of the poll results, noting
that this was causing public concern and anxiety and gave rise to
suspicions of vote rigging.
Election
administration
ZBC continued to rely entirely on ZEC's explanations for the
late and slow release of the election results.
The broadcaster made
no attempt of its own to test the plausibility of ZEC's explanations,
nor even sought to explain the details involved in the vote verification
exercise, which has been identified as the cause of the delay.
It did not ask ZEC why
it was only now "currently receiving the presidential election
results from the various provinces" three days after voting
had been completed. Instead, ZBC simply relied on the Commission
to explain that the "verification and collation will commence
in the presence of all candidates or their national chief election
agents once all results have been received". ZEC was not asked
why this process had taken longer than expected.
ZBC's anxious audiences
(8pm) had to content themselves with the already known "news"
of results from 140 constituencies showing that the ruling party
had won 68 House of Assembly seats, MDC-Tsvangirai (67) and MDC-Mutambara
(5).
By way of diversion ZBC
continued to prominently and passively report the favourable verdicts
of more regional and continental observer missions that effectively
dismissed concerns over Zimbabwe's disputed electoral process.
For example, all stations'
8pm bulletins reported the Pan African Parliament's claims
that the "basic conditions for credible, free and fair elections . . . existed
in the Zimbabwean harmonized elections . . . " but ZBC did
not ask how PAP had arrived at this verdict. It just quoted PAP
claiming that political parties had held their campaign rallies
"in a peaceful, orderly and highly tolerant environment . . . "
and that the conduct of the police was "highly professional . . . "
In addition, ZBC quoted
PAP commending ZEC's "level of preparedness" and
"easy accessibility" but made no attempt to obtain comment
from contestants or independent commentators.
By comparison, the private
electronic media reported growing public dissatisfaction over the
late release of the election results and rising tensions.
They argued that ZEC's
administration of the polls fell short of regional standards required
for the elections to be declared free and fair.
SW Radio Africa and The
Zimbabwe Times, for example, reported "analysts" accusing
President Mugabe's government of attempting to rig the polls
by delaying the announcement of the presidential result.
For example, it quoted
one commentator, Macdonald Lewanika, accusing ZEC of "manipulating"
the announcement of the results. Said Lewanika: "Although
the results are coming in, province by province, the Commission
is not announcing them in that order".
He also noted that "discrepancies
were emerging" between ZEC's figures and those obtained
by the opposition and independent groups, citing two Bindura constituencies,
Mt Darwin West and Goromonzi West, which ZANU PF won.
Studio 7 quoted others
making similar observations, including one "analyst",
Siphamandla Zondi, who argued that " . . . the manner in which
ZEC is managing the tally of votes and the release of results points
to unfair electoral practice".
It also quoted Moeletsi
Mbeki, brother to the South African president, accusing the authorities
of trying to "massage the results to give them the outcome
that Mugabe wants to see . . . in order to avoid a run-off"
SW Radio Africa and The
Zimbabwe Times, citing unnamed sources within the MDC, reported
that the country's defence and security chiefs had "blocked"
the announcement of the presidential winner "after it emerged
that Mugabe had lost to Tsvangirai".
All the private electronic
media also reported government as having deployed security forces
in most urban centres in anticipation of public protests should
Mugabe be declared the winner.
In addition,
they recorded growing international condemnation of Mugabe over
the late announcement of the results with SW Radio Africa, for example,
quoting the current Slovenian chair of the European Union calling
on Mugabe to respect the election outcome and to step down if the
results were not in his favour.
Figs 1 and 2
show the sourcing patterns on ZBC and the private electronic media.
Fig
1: Voice distribution on ZBC
ZEC |
Foreign
diplomats |
Police |
3 |
5 |
4 |
Fig
2: Voice distribution in the private electronic media
| ZEC |
MDC |
Alternative |
Foreign
diplomats |
Media |
2 |
9 |
7 |
9 |
4 |
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
|