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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Daily
Media Update No.26
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
April 14, 2008
Post
election focus
Frightening new levels of disinformation and distortion featured
in the two government-controlled dailies this morning, reinforcing
the impression that they are not just biased in favour of ZANU PF
but are actually used as conduits by the embattled authorities to
misinform the public.
While both The Herald
and the Chronicle led their papers with Sunday's news that
the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission would conduct a recount of the
parliamentary and presidential votes in 23 constituencies despite
a High Court ruling barring it from doing so, their main feature
was an obviously fraudulent story claiming to have unearthed details
about how the MDC (Tsvangirai) faction had rigged the election by
bribing election officials.
Both papers also distorted
the essence of the communiqué issued at the end of a 12-hour
emergency SADC summit in Lusaka on Saturday. While The Herald claimed
that SADC leaders had "accepted the explanation of government . . . regarding
the release of the (presidential) elections," without providing
either the evidence for this or its explanation, the Chronicle at
least noted that the leaders had "urged ZEC to release the
results of the presidential election" in the third paragraph
of its story, which focused on a SADC pledge to send an observer
team to witness the recounting of ballots in the 23 constituencies.
The Herald buried news of SADC's appeal to ZEC to release
the presidential election results "expeditiously" to
the inside page turn to its front page story.
Between them, the two
dailies carried 14 stories on Zimbabwe's post-election crisis,
although none of them viewed it as such
The Zimbabwean on Sunday,
which only reached the streets today (Monday), was more revealing
about the crisis, the authorities' plans to create conditions
favourable to ZANU PF in the run-off election they are planning,
and concerns by the international community over the delay in releasing
the presidential election results. The paper carried 33 stories
on these issues.
The Herald and Chronicle
unquestionly reported ZEC's decision to go ahead with the
recounting of presidential and House of Assembly election results
in 23 constituencies on April 19 "regardless of parallel court
procedures that might be instituted by any party". The Herald
quoted ZEC chief elections officer, Utoile Silaigwana, insisting
that "it is within our mandate . . . to do the recounts and
they would proceed . . . "
Neither of the
papers provided any information about Friday's High Court
ruling, but reported Silaigwana saying, by way of dismissal, that
ZEC had "not seen the order barring us from conducting the
recounts, so the process would proceed as advised." The papers
made no effort to seek independent expert opinion about this evident
conflict between a judicial order and ZEC's decision.
The story in
the two dailies claiming to expose how the MDC rigged the March
elections joins others the papers have published recently that bear
the hallmarks of deliberately concocted disinformation propaganda
material inserted to discredit the MDC and provide a justification
for the recounting of votes.
The Herald's front-page story, Document exposes alleged MDC-T
ballot bribery, was based solely on what the papers claimed to be
"a party internal document penned by the party's secretary-general,
Tendai Biti" and "circulating widely in Zimbabwe".
But they made no attempt to exercise the very first law of basic
journalistic practice by verifying the source of their story, in
this case with Biti, or even the MDC. Instead, they published unsubstantiated
and damaging allegations from the document which, they said revealed
that the MDC had allegedly rigged the elections by bribing teachers
and civil servants recruited by ZEC as election officers "with
amounts ranging between $3 billion and $50 billion" in order
"to overstate our votes". According to the story the
document also reveals "that MDC-T worked in cahoots with the
Zimbabwe Election
Support Network to observe the elections" and that this
would take the MDC's "campaign right inside the polling
stations and position us at substantial strategic advantage to even
compromise the secrecy of the ballot in our favour''.
The Herald also carried the full text of the document over the two
pages of its Opinion and Analysis section, which included an introduction
describing the document as an "MDC strategy to compromise
elections and the extent to which they planned to mortgage Zimbabwe
to their allies in return for the funding they were promised."
To illustrate this point the paper ran the following statement allegedly
written by Biti: "Our partners, in particular the Australian,
the British and American governments, are united in their determination
to have Mugabe arrested and handed over to The Hague as soon as
possible to face trial for crimes against humanity . . . "
MMPZ believes the publication
of this unsubstantiated, dangerous and inflammatory article to be
a deliberate and deceitful attempt to incite hatred and disaffection
against a legitimate political party contesting elections and constitutes
a reprehensible abuse of the media to instigate instability and
confusion among the electorate.
The papers also portrayed
voices critical of ZEC's delay in announcing the presidential
election results as also being part of a conspiracy. For instance,
the paper carried a cartoon showing Zambian President Levy Mwanawasa
as working with Britain and the MDC to pressure ZEC into releasing
the results.
Fortunately,
for readers determined to find an alternative opinion, The Zimbabwean
on Sunday quoted the MDC's Tendai Biti dismissing the government-controlled
dailies' allegations of MDC rigging saying "the regime
is desperate and is now putting out fake documents as MDC papers"
adding that "it is quite clear Zanu PF is desperate to reverse
the people's decision on the March 29" elections. The
paper also carried an analysis dismissing other alleged conspiracies
aimed at discrediting the MDC and published in the government-controlled
press. In an opinion piece by Levi Mhaka headlined "Watch
out for the lies", the writer argues, "The Herald has
failed to subject many of its political stories using journalistic
standards of truthfulness, accuracy, balance and fairness."
The lead story in The
Zimbabwean on Sunday reported MDC's plans to stage mass action
protests to compel ZEC to publish the presidential election results
and quoted its spokesman, Nelson Chamisa, saying the party's
National Executive had resolved to "involve people in expressing
disappointment over the arrogance of this regime in not releasing
the results . . . and illegally extending their term of office."
The paper also quoted analyst, John Makumbe saying the "failure
by the regional and international community to rein in Mugabe meant
that Zimbabweans had to find their own solutions to the problem
confronting them.
The privately owned paper also carried six stories from various
regional bodies calling for the release of the presidential results,
among them one from the African National Congress. It also reported
three incidents of politically motivated violence and growing fears
of a violent campaign against the electorate leading up to any presidential
election run-off.
Fig 1 and 2
illustrates the sourcing pattern in the government-controlled press
and The Zimbabwean on Sunday.
Fig 1: Voice distribution in The Herald and Chronicle
MDC
|
ZEC |
Lawyers |
Alternative |
Foreign
diplomats |
Farmers |
4 |
3 |
2 |
3 |
3 |
1 |
Fig
2: Voice distribution in The Zimbabwean on Sunday
ZANU PF
|
MDC |
ZEC |
Govt |
Alternative |
Judiciary |
ZRP |
Foreign
diplomats |
1 |
9 |
2 |
2 |
10 |
1 |
3 |
3 |
| Farmer
organisations |
Media |
Ordinary
people |
Unnamed |
War veterans |
1 |
1 |
5 |
8 |
3 |
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fact
sheet
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