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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Daily
Media Update No.24
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
April 12, 2008
Daily print
media report - Saturday 12th April 2008
Post-election focus
The government-controlled dailies, The Herald and Chronicle (12/4),
remained silent on the extent of the deepening national political
crisis arising from the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission's failure
to release the presidential election results.
None of their 16 reports on the subject acknowledged or explored
the negative repercussions of the problem by relating them to rising
local, regional and international indignation over the delay.
Instead, the official dailies tried to portray ZEC's alarming
failure to release the results as normal. This was illustrated by
the prominence given to a report that two church leaders, Trevor
Manhanga and Patrick Mutume, had expressed "satisfaction"
with ZEC's explanations for its failure to release the results
of the election two weeks after it had been staged.
Notably, ZEC's "explanation" for the delay in
releasing the results was never given. Neither did the papers explain
on whose brief the two clergymen met ZEC, nor why the commission
seemed to have privatised information about the presidential outcome
by keeping it out of the public domain. They only cited Manhanga
describing the "closed-door" meeting as "free"
and that ZEC chairman George Chiweshe had answered their concerns,
adding: "He could not go into details as the matter is before
the courts."
There was also no effort by the two papers - the only ones
available to the Zimbabwean public today - to link the delay
in releasing the election results with the emergency meeting of
SADC leaders in Lusaka today, convened specifically to deal with
Zimbabwe's growing political crisis. They simply reported
former government officials dismissing the conference as "unnecessary"
since the electoral authorities were "still busy collating
results of the presidential election".
The Herald and Chronicle also failed to establish why President
Mugabe had snubbed the emergency summit, sending three former Cabinet
ministers and a secretary for foreign affairs in his place. Instead,
the same two papers attempted to divert the public's attention
away from the crisis arising from ZEC's manifest failure to
release the results with reports portraying business, the opposition
and Western countries as architects of Zimbabwe's political
and economic woes.
In one of these, they passively reported an emotional tirade from
Police Elections Commander Faustino Mazango accusing the MDC-T of
all manner of unsubstantiated political misdemeanours ranging from
"agitating for war", "spoiling for a fight"
to "agitating for stayaways" at a Press briefing announcing
a ban on all political rallies in the country. Reportedly, the ban
followed the MDC-T's application to hold a rally tomorrow
(Sunday). They quoted him saying: " . . . we are all aware
that the current period is still very sensitive unless it is the
intention of that party (MDC-T) to provoke and cause mayhem for
the purposes of satisfying their masters."
The Herald editorial also attacked the business community for creating
artificial shortages to "foment" rebellion against government
without factoring in the country's unstable economic environment.
Said the paper: "We can only warn the (business community)
that such attempts will be repelled with equal force and they will
forever regret."
In addition, the paper's robustly vitriolic Saturday columnist
Nathaniel Manheru, lashed out at SADC chairman, Zambia's Levy
Mwanawasa, for calling an emergency summit to discuss Zimbabwe's
political crisis on the grounds that it was unnecessary, anathema
to Pan-African ideology and a decision that fulfilled part of the
West's alleged regime-change agenda for Zimbabwe.
Fig. 1 shows
the voice sourcing patterns in The Herald and Chronicle
Fig 1: Voice distribution in the official press
| ZANU PF
|
MDC-T |
Govt |
ZEC |
ZRP |
Lawyers |
Foreign
Diplomats |
Alternative |
Defence
forces |
3 |
1 |
3 |
2 |
2 |
1 |
1 |
3 |
1 |
Daily electronic
media report - Friday 11th April 2008
Post-election focus
ZBC continued to conceal the impact of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission's
inexplicable failure to publicize the presidential election results
by either downplaying or distorting growing domestic, regional and
international concern over the delay in 15 reports it carried on
the matter. The broadcaster proved to be a mouthpiece of the former
ZANU PF government, by anchoring most of its reports on the pronouncements
of officials from that party with little attempt to balance it with
alternative opinion. ZBC (8pm) for example, failed to interrogate
the basis upon which former Foreign Affairs Permanent Secretary,
Joey Bimha, described the decision by SADC chairman, Levy Mwanawasa
to hold an emergency summit to discuss Zimbabwe's growing
political crisis as "unnecessary" and "unwarranted".
Instead, it merely quoted him exonerating government, saying "there
is no deliberate delay to release the results on the part of government"
as it was also "waiting for their announcement after verification".
He claimed that since ZEC "is an independent body" government
"cannot push ZEC to announce the results".
ZTV reporter Judith Makwanya claimed Mwanawasa's decision
to call the summit "has come as a surprise to many onlookers
who believe the SADC region knows the Zimbabwe situation better"
without explaining what this statement meant. She cited 'a
political analyst' who said that it appeared Mwanawasa was
"giving in to pressure from some Western powers who are bent
on discrediting the Zimbabwe electoral processes".
No evidence was provided to support these claims.
Instead, Makwanya attempted to justify ZEC's failure to release
the results on the basis that such delays were "not unique
to Zimbabwe" as "similar delays were witnessed in Mozambique,
Nigeria and even the USA when George Bush came to power for the
first time" without providing the context in which these problems
occurred in these countries.
In another report, ZBC (8pm) vaguely reported on the meeting between
some church leaders and ZEC chairman George Chiweshe. The broadcaster
did not explain why the church leaders were meeting Chiweshe or
what transpired at the meeting. It simply reported Chiweshe saying
the presidential poll results "will only be announced after
the High Court ruling on Monday", without asking him how any
legal proceedings had prevented ZEC from announcing the results.
Neither did the broadcaster ask him why there was a delay in the
first place.
ZBC also passively reported threatening and partisan political statements
from the police. For example, all stations (8pm) reported Assistant
Commissioner Faustina Mazango accusing the MDC (Tsvangirai) faction
of "spoiling for a fight . . . " while announcing the
banning of political rallies until after the announcement of the
results. Apart from failing to seek comment from the MDC, ZBC passively
quoted Mazango claiming the MDC had "deployed around 350 youths
countrywide to man bases . . . " without even asking for some
evidence to support his claim. Notably, the national public broadcaster
ignored widely reported incidents in which ZANU PF was allegedly
sponsoring post-election retribution attacks against a wide variety
of Zimbabwean communities using mainly National Youth Service militias.
ZBC bulletins continued to highlight the court appearances of ZEC
officials accused of undercounting ZANU PF votes.
The private
electronic media provided more informative analysis of the constitutional
and political crisis triggered by ZEC's refusal to release
the presidential election results, and growing regional and international
concern in their 23 stories. They reported rising tensions in the
country and increasing pressure on President Mugabe to concede defeat
if he lost to MDC leader, Morgan Tsvangirai.
Studio 7, for example, quoted UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon speaking
on the eve of the emergency SADC summit on Zimbabwe saying, "he
was pleased that the regional leaders are mobilising and coordinating
to help Zimbabwe overcome its post electoral crisis through peaceful
means". Ban Ki-moon added that he was "concerned that
the situation in Zimbabwe could deteriorate further if no prompt
action is taken to resolve the impasse".
Studio 7 and The Zimbabwe Times online publication reported Tsvangirai
as having met South African President, Thabo Mbeki, among other
regional leaders ahead of the SADC summit, although they did not
provide details of the meeting.
SW Radio Africa quoted South Africa's ANC official, Matthews
Phosa, criticising Mbeki's "quiet diplomacy" policy
saying it has "failed" to resolve Zimbabwe's political
crisis. It noted that Phosa's criticism of Mbeki's stance
on the Zimbabwe crisis came after ANC president Jacob Zuma allegedly
called for "tougher action on Zimbabwe" while his deputy
described the withholding of the results as "equivalent to
a coup". The private electronic media also recorded rising
tensions and political violence.
SW Radio Africa and New Zimbabwe reported the police ban of an MDC
rally scheduled for Saturday at Glamis Stadium in Harare. New Zimbabwe.com
cited police spokesman Wayne Bvudzijena confirming the decision
and justifying it saying, "We see no reason for rallies since
we have had an election".
New Zimbabwe.com also reported the MDC calling for a general strike
on Tuesday to demand the release of poll results. Citing the party's
spokesman, Nelson Chamisa, New Zimbabwe reported the party as having
consulted its partners in civil society and trade unions who had
all agreed to the move.
Studio 7 reported Tsvangirai accusing government of "deploying
troops across the country to intimidate the population should a
run-off take place". In another report, Studio 7 reported
the opposition and various civil society groups making similar allegations.
They claimed government was "stepping up a campaign of intimidation
and violence in rural areas to cow voters who shifted their allegiance
to the opposition in the elections".
The private electronic media published three incidents of human
rights violations and political violence against perceived ZANU
PF opponents.
Among them was the arrest of an MDC lawyer, Innocent Chagonda, for
demanding the release of a helicopter hired by the party last March
(SW Radio Africa) and news that former Health Minister and the new
MP for Murehwa North, David Parirenyatwa, was allegedly "organising
violence in Murehwa and threatening opposition supporters"
for voting for the MDC in last month's polls. However, the
report on political violence in Murehwa lacked independent corroboration.
Figs 1 and 2
show the sourcing patterns on ZBC and the private electronic media
Fig 1:
Voice distribution on ZBC
| Government
|
ZEC |
ZRP |
Alternative |
5 |
3 |
8 |
5 |
Notably, all
alternative voices were on the clergy.
Fig
2: Voice distribution in the private electronic media
| ZANU PF
|
MDC |
Alternative |
Lawyers |
Foreign
Diplomats |
Media |
Police |
5 |
11 |
8 |
11 |
9 |
4 |
2 |
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