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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Daily
Media Update No.25
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
April 13, 2008
Daily print media report
- Sunday, April 13th, 2008
Post-election
focus
The government-controlled weeklies, The Sunday Mail and Sunday News,
continued to downplay the intensifying constitutional and political
crisis in Zimbabwe sparked by the electoral authorities' refusal
to release the presidential election results and their controversial
decision to conduct a recount in a number of constituencies. The
papers censored other important news, such as Friday night's
High Court order granting the MDC interim relief against the Zimbabwe
Electoral Commission's decision to conduct a recount in 23
constituencies at the instigation of ZANU PF. The two papers predictably
led their front pages with the views of South African President,
Thabo Mbeki, following his meeting in Harare with President Mugabe
ahead of the emergency
SADC summit, convened to discuss Zimbabwe's post-election
crisis.
They approvingly reported Mbeki's comments as proof of a general
overreaction to ZEC's refusal to release the results of the
presidential poll when they reported him saying, there was "no
crisis in Zimbabwe as everybody is waiting for ZEC to announce the
results".
He described
Zimbabwe's post-poll situation as a "normal electoral
process according to the laws of the country". The Sunday
Mail and Sunday News did not question Mugabe's motives for
not attending the SADC summit, passively attributing this to the
late invitation and other unspecified commitments. The government
weeklies distorted growing international frustration over ZEC's
refusal to release the results by claiming that Britain and America
had "stepped up pressure on other countries to force Mugabe
to give power to Tsvangirai" before the official announcement
of the results.
The Sunday Mail and Sunday News also reported ZEC ordering a recount
in 23 House of Assembly constituencies without questioning the legality
of such a move or analysing its implications.
In another story, the Sunday News reported ZEC as having "entered
into an agreement" with agents of presidential candidates
that contested the election to "compile results for their
candidates using figures they got from polling stations" and
"then match them with those the electoral body has before
the results of the crucial poll is made public".
It quoted ZEC chairman, George Chiweshe, saying the electoral authority
would only issue "a comprehensive statement" on the
contentious presidential ballot after a High Court ruling tomorrow.
Chiweshe claimed that the results were "unlikely to be released
immediately because of . . . the controversy around them",
adding that because of this ZEC was "trying to come up with
a result that will not be contested by any of the four parties".
The government-controlled weeklies also ignored widespread reports
of human rights violations against a variety of Zimbabweans by state
security agents and ZANU PF supporters.
The Standard
provided more informed coverage of Zimbabwe's post election
problems, highlighted rising tensions in the country, and growing
regional and international pressure on Harare to release the outcome
of the presidential poll. Only The Standard revealed that the High
Court had "stopped at the last minute" ZEC's controversial
decision to conduct a recount in the 23 constituencies by granting
the MDC interim relief in its urgent application to stop the Commission
from doing so. The paper viewed the ruling as a "big blow"
to Mugabe who "could have used the recount to gain more votes
to justify a run-off with Tsvangirai" who is reported to be
the winner of the first round. Notably, ZEC took out large advertisements
in all the Sunday papers notifying the public of its intention to
conduct a recount in 23 constituencies, which formed the entirety
of ZBC's coverage of the news without any interpretation.
However, The
Standard reported the MDC's petition claiming "there
was no basis in law for a recount in the presidential vote when
candidates were not aware of the result." The paper also reported
the MDC stating in its petition that "it had never been informed
that recounts were requested" as stipulated by the Electoral
Act, and submitted that no requests were made "at all
or within 48 hours," as required by the law.The Standard's
comment blamed Mugabe for ZEC's delay in the announcement
of the results arguing that he "simply . . . does not want
Zimbabweans to know that he was defeated" by Tsvangirai. It
argued that the continued delay robbed Zimbabweans of their "right
to know the outcome of their vote" and was "a blatant
violation of the SADC electoral guidelines".
The Standard pointed
out that if ZANU PF had won the election, the outcome "would
not have remained a State secret", adding that it would have
seized the opportunity to remind the world, and particularly the
West, that the victory was "a measure of the popularity of
Mugabe's party". It also criticized the dismantling
of the National Command Centre "even though there are indications
some results could be contested" and feared the results could
now be "at the mercy of those whose wish is to deny the right
of the people to decide who should lead this country".
The private weekly highlighted SADC's disquiet over the Zimbabwe
crisis. It cited SADC chair and Zambian president, Levy Mwanawasa,
speaking at the start of the summit saying, "It would be wrong
to turn a blind eye on Zimbabwe". He said ZEC's failure
to announce the results had "given rise to a climate of tension
in the country" adding that this was further "aggravated"
by the Zimbabwe High Court's "inability to settle the
matter speedily". The paper also recorded five incidents of
human rights violations and violence mainly by state security agents
and ZANU PF supporters against a cross section of Zimbabweans.
Among them was
the burning of house belonging to an MDC (Tsvangirai) official in
Chiweshe and the arrest in Mashonaland East of three people who
had gone to a police station to report a ZANU PF official who was
said to be waging a campaign of retribution against people suspected
to have voted for the MDC. Similarly, it reported the burning of
more than 30 huts belonging to farm workers in Mashonaland Central
by war veterans and ZANU PF militias. The paper sought comment from
a provincial police spokesperson, Michael Munyikwa, who said he
was still investigating the incident.
Figs 1 and 2 show the sourcing patterns of the official weeklies
and The Standard.
Fig 1: Voice distribution in The Sunday Mail and Sunday
News
| Govt |
Zanu PF |
MDC |
ZEC |
Alternative |
Media |
Foreign
Diplomats |
ZRP |
4 |
3 |
6 |
2 |
3 |
1 |
4 |
1 |
Fig
2: Voice distribution in The Standard
| MDC |
Makoni |
ZEC |
Alternative |
Lawyers
|
ZRP |
Ordinary
People |
Foreign
Diplomats |
Farmers |
7 |
3 |
2 |
8 |
2 |
2 |
9 |
4 |
1 |
Daily Electronic Media
Report - Saturday April 12th 2008
Post-election
focus
ZBC maintained its one-dimensional coverage of the presidential
election result standoff by carrying reports justifying ZANU PF's
complicity in the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission's refusal
to release the results on the back of the party's allegations
of election rigging while censoring alternative views. This partisan
coverage even saw the national public broadcaster ignore a High
Court ruling on Friday night granting the MDC interim relief in
its urgent petition seeking to bar ZEC from conducting recounts
in 16 constituencies that ZANU PF lost to the MDC, alleging a miscount
of the party's votes. This only appeared in the private media.
ZTV (8pm), for
example, restricted its coverage to reporting that ZANU PF had written
to ZEC requesting a recount of the presidential ballot without even
questioning the legality, let alone the logic of the party's
perplexing attempts to revisit a result that has still not been
released. In addition, it sought to give credence to ZANU PF's
voter manipulation claims when it cited a "detailed secret
document" said to have been authored by MDC secretary general
Tendai Biti "with clear details of how to rig the elections".
Reportedly, it exposed how "a number of teachers engaged by
ZEC as election officials agreed to overstate the vote (of the opposition)
for a payment of between $3bn and $60bn". No effort was made
to establish the authenticity of such a serious allegation. Similarly,
no comment was sought from the MDC except for the presenter's
brief reference that the party had "distanced itself from
the document". Neither did the station view the matter as
sub-judice in view of on-going court appearances of the ZEC officials
accused of 'election fraud'.
However, its
presenter appeared to have found the temptation to lace the report
with her own opinion irresistible, claiming that the alleged document
was "meant to guarantee an MDC landslide victory which would
enable the party to take over the country and implement . . . changes
meant to please their international friends who sponsored . . .
(their) campaign".
All ZBC's evening bulletins seized on comments by South African
President Thabo Mbeki dismissing ZEC's refusal to release
the presidential election results as constituting a "crisis"
after meeting President Mugabe en-route to an emergency SADC heads
of state meeting in Lusaka to try to find a solution to the post-election
tension in the country.
As a result,
there was no attempt to qualify Mbeki's claim that the post-election
situation in the country was "a normal process, which is in
accordance with the laws of the country". Neither did the
broadcaster reconcile his observations with those of his ruling
ANC party, which believes that ZEC's continued delay in releasing
the results threatened Zimbabwe's stability. ZBC simply accepted
Mbeki's blind defence of ZANU PF without questioning how this
affected his role as the SADC-appointed mediator between the party
and the MDC in search of a negotiated settlement.
Instead, reporter Judith Makwanya took the opportunity to malign
the MDC, saying: "Mr Mbeki also spoke about his meeting with
the MDC Tsvangirai side, where the group is said to be chickening
out of the runoff, claiming it won the election even before the
last result is pronounced by the electoral commission" (ZTV,
8pm). As a result of this unprofessional editorial insertion, it
remained unclear whether it was Mbeki who had accused the MDC of
being scared of a run-off or whether it was just the reporter's
own opinion. There was also no explanation for Makwanya's
assumption that there would be a second round presidential poll
in the absence of official results.
Only the private
electronic media continued to give due attention to the rising tension
in the country precipitated by ZEC's failure to release the
presidential poll results and what the private media perceived to
be ZANU PF's failure to accept defeat. They continued to highlight
international outrage over the issue, updated their audiences on
the legal battles being waged, and the post-election retribution
attacks against white commercial farmers and perceived MDC supporters
by ZANU PF militia and state security agents countrywide, among
other developments. For example, they exposed the differences in
opinion in SADC over the Zimbabwe situation, citing Mbeki's
dismissal of a 'crisis' and the concern expressed by
SADC chairman, Zambian President Levy Mwanawasa.
Studio 7 reported that Mwanawasa had "made it clear"
in his opening remarks at the SADC meeting that unlike Mbeki, he
"believed the situation in Zimbabwe constitutes a crisis and
requires regional intervention".
The Zimbabwe Times and SW Radio Africa gave the same version of
the story. The Zimbabwe Times, for example, observed that the SADC
meeting, which spilled into Sunday, had put pressure on the country's
delegation of three former cabinet ministers and the former secretary
of foreign affairs (representing Mugabe) to "immediately release"
the presidential election results.
It also reported
the Zimbabwe delegation as having taken "great exception"
to the presence of MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai, widely believed
to have won the presidential poll, while Mbeki and Angolan President
Jose Eduardo Dos Santos were reported to have "fiercely defended"
Mugabe.
Zimdaily also reported differences in the ranks of the war veterans
over the post-election crisis. It carried a letter from one body
of the former liberation war fighters, the Zimbabwe Liberation Veterans'
Forum, announcing their readiness "to side with Zimbabweans,
MDC, civil society and all progressive forces in Zimbabwe to defend
the ideals of self-determination". In addition, the body called
on "all commanders of various state security arms to uphold
their constitutional duty to respect elections outcome". ZBC
censored these issues.
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