| |
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Daily
Media Update No.27
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
April 15, 2008
Post-election
focus
The government-controlled dailies enjoyed their monopoly of the
newspaper market today to present one-sided coverage of the Zimbabwe
Electoral Commission's failure to announce the presidential
election results in their reports, while attacking those critical
of the delay in their opinion columns. Between them, the government
papers carried 16 stories on the crisis in Zimbabwe, without viewing
it as such.
The Herald and Chronicle reported the High Court ruling dismissing
the urgent MDC (Tsvangirai) application seeking to force ZEC to
release the election results, but made no attempt to seek independent
expert opinion on the important implications of the decision.Instead,
they simply reported the judge saying "the full judgment and
reasons (for his ruling) would follow later", and quoted ZANU
PF officials celebrating the decision. For example, the curiously
titled "chairperson of the ZANU PF media committee",
Patrick Chinamasa, was quoted saying the "MDC (Tsvangirai)
application was doomed from the onset as they were trying to stampede
ZEC to announce incorrect results in order to cause confusion."
And Bright Matonga, identified as the Deputy Minister of Information,
said the judgment "exonerates ZANU PF from unfounded allegations
made by the MDC" that it was interfering with the electoral
process.
The papers also reported Chinamasa claiming, ironically, that the
MDC petition "was meant to cause a delay in the announcement
of the results in order to portray the country as one in a crisis."
But there was no effort to ask him on what basis he was making such
an absurd claim.Nor
was there any effort to obtain a sensible explanation for the extraordinary
assertion in the ZEC lawyer's main argument that "it
would be dangerous to give an order that may not be complied with
in view of outside exigencies they (ZEC) are not able to control."
The papers also censored news that the High Court was due to hear
an application by the MDC today challenging the decision by ZEC
to recount votes for the presidential and parliamentary election
in 23 constituencies following complaints by ZANU PF, and notably,
they carried ZEC advertisements for a second day inviting observers
to the recount.
Both The Herald and Chronicle failed to report on the MDC's
call for a national strike today except in the context of a police
threat to deal "severely" with anyone breaking the law.
Instead, they
passively allowed police chief spokesperson Wayne Bvudzijena to
perpetuate a damaging lie describing the MDC-T's democratic
resistance committees as "their terror group . . . which carried
(out) a campaign of petrol bombings last year," despite the
fact that the State failed to secure a single conviction against
the alleged bombers. In the same story that clearly aimed to portray
the MDC-T as violent, the papers reported that some of the party's
supporters in Glen View had "provoked" ZANU PF supporters
while distributing flyers calling for the stay-away and this had
triggered a clash, which resulted in one unidentified person being
injured.
It was also not clear in the report how the ZANU PF supporters were
provoked.
The Chronicle, in an editorial opinion, accused the business sector
of having been "hired" to campaign for the opposition
by inciting a protest vote. The two dailies also continued to portray
voices critical of the delay in announcing presidential results
as part of a conspiracy. For
instance, the story, "Mwanawasa erred: Mnangagwa" only
narrowly reported Emmerson Mnangagwa`s portrayal of the Zambian
leader as having broken protocol by calling for a meeting on the
Zimbabwe crisis without "following laid down procedures"
and "prior consultation" with member states. It did
not attempt explain the emergency nature of the summit, which would
not have allowed time for such processes.
Similarly, an editorial in The Herald claimed that "an analysis"
of British Premier Gordon Brown's statements criticizing Zimbabwe
and calling for the urgent release of the election results, "shows
clearly who the instigators and masterminds of the Lusaka summit
(were) and why." It also linked Brown to unnamed "major
British corporations" in Zimbabwe that have allegedly put
the country under a "state of attempted siege".
Similarly, the
Chronicle alleged the elections were not free and fair and accused
the British of a conspiracy to "bribe the people of Zimbabwe
into rejecting the leadership of Mugabe and ZANU PF" without
providing a shred of evidence to support this absurd claim. The
papers' also continued to downplay the main point of the SADC
communiqué urging ZEC to "expeditiously" release
the results of the presidential election, focusing instead on the
favourable elements of the statement concluding that there was "neither
a stalemate nor an impasse" and that government had been "commended"
for the peaceful conduct of the elections.
Another Herald
editorial railed against the Western media, accusing them of only
reporting the MDC (Tsvangirai) perspective and not that of ZANU
PF, without providing any evidence to support the allegation. It
ignored the fact that government has banned these organisations
from operating in the country and that despite this these media
regularly quote government and ZANU PF officials. Ironically, the
article ignored the distortions and bias of the paper in which it
appeared, which makes a habit of slavishly promoting ZANU PF, suppresses
unfavourable news and alternative points of view, and frequently
distorts the facts, as this report illustrates so vividly.
It also emerged in today's
dailies that MDC leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, had not attempted to
hijack the SADC summit by trying to address the region's leaders,
as was implied in yesterday's Herald (14/4). Today's
edition inadvertently noted that Tsvangirai, as well as losing presidential
aspirant, Simba Makoni, had actually been included on the agenda
by the summit organizers and that it was only after discussions
that the leaders agreed to bar Makoni and Tsvangirai from addressing
them as this, "was tantamount to elevating opposition politicians
to the status of heads of state and government."
The Herald (14/4)
had reported that Tsvangirai had been denied the opportunity to
address the summit and that he had not been invited. The Chronicle
reported the court appearances of two journalists arrested for electoral
related crimes. It reported that British journalist Jonathan Michael
Clayton had been arrested for allegedly making a false declaration
on arrival in Zimbabwe and that the court would rule today on whether
he had a case to answer. The other story reported that Margaret
Ann Kriel appeared in court facing charges of practising as a journalist
without accreditation in Bulawayo, in contravention of a section
of the Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act.
Fig
1: Voice distribution in The Herald and Chronicle
| Govt |
Zanu PF |
MDC |
Lawyers |
Foreign
Diplomats |
Police |
Judiciary |
3 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
2 |
2 |
1 |
ZBC continued
to confine coverage of the country's post-election crisis
to highlighting ZANU PF and official sentiment on the matter while
blacking out alternative opinion. As a result, none of the 13 stories
it carried on the topic gave an independent and balanced perspective
of the post-election tension, triggered by the Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission's failure to release of the presidential election
results and ZANU PF's demands for recounts in 23 constituencies,
alleging vote tampering. For example, the national public broadcaster
appeared unaware of the governance vacuum that exists as a result
of ZEC's decision to continue withholding the results more
than two weeks after polling. This has become especially worrisome
in view of the growing number of reports of post-election retribution
against perceived opposition supporters by suspected ZANU PF supporters
and state security agents countrywide.
ZBC also censored
news of the national strike called by the MDC to protest against
the delayed announcement of the presidential poll. On the contrary,
it remained content to feed on official statements discrediting
the opposition and justifying the delay in the release of the election
results. This was evidenced by the way ZBC continued to publicize
stale propaganda alleging the MDC's vote rigging, while highlighting
only the favourable aspects of last Saturday's SADC leaders'
summit communiqué. ZANU PF's demands for a recount
in 23 constituencies was also narrowly interpreted to justify the
High Court's dismissal today of the MDC's urgent petition
seeking the immediate release of the presidential election results.For
example, instead of giving balanced views on the High Court's
decision, ZTV and Spot FM (8pm) limited themselves to reporting
ZANU PF's Patrick Chinamasa accusing the MDC of trying to
"stampede" the electoral authorities into announcing
"a wrong result and to cause a false image of a Zimbabwe in
crisis". Said Chinamasa: "It (MDC) wants to precipitate
a crisis in Zimbabwe . . . it is very clear that the MDC does not
want the Electoral Commission to announce correct figures."
No alternative comments, including those from the MDC were sought.
Similarly, there was no break in the way ZBC continued to report
the outcome of the emergency SADC summit, which the broadcaster
maintained represented a diplomatic victory for Zimbabwe and a nightmarish
experience for the MDC's Morgan Tsvangirai.For
example, ZTV and Spot FM's reports (8pm) drowned the regional
leaders' advice to have the results "expeditiously released"
with official comments from Emmerson Mnangagwa, one of President
Mugabe's representatives, hailing the SADC ruling that "there
is neither a stalemate nor an impasse in the electoral process in
Zimbabwe".
No effort to reconcile these two positions was made.
Instead, ZBC diplomatic correspondent Judith Makwanya told Spot
FM's audiences: "The Zimbabwe delegation explained the
various legal processes that are currently underway which had caused
the delay in the announcement of the results and refuted suggestions
that the government was in any way responsible for the delay."
In contrast,
the private electronic media reported heightened tension in the
country as a result of a violent campaign of retribution against
hundreds of opposition supporters countrywide following ZANU PF's
losses in the March 29 polls and MDC's planned mass protests.
In the first publicised cases of fatalities from such crackdowns,
SW Radio Africa reported the beating to death of two opposition
activists, Tapiwa Mbwada from Karoi and an unnamed teacher in Mashonaland
East, by suspected war veterans and ZANU PF militia. In addition,
it reported on the abduction of eight women from Mashonaland East.
The private
radio station report lacked police confirmation, although it cited
Ian Makone, a top aide to MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai, attesting
to the attacks, saying: "The scale of beatings in most rural
areas are so shocking the victims can barely walk or talk."
The private electronic media also highlighted widespread disillusionment
with SADC leaders' insipid reaction to the political crisis
in Zimbabwe, especially the declaration by South African President
Thabo Mbeki claiming there was no crisis in the country, despite
evidence of violence, arrests, and the persecution of opposition
supporters, farmers and journalists in the post-election period.
This was reflected in 17 stories they carried on the subject. Studio
7, for example, reported Tsvangirai's MDC describing Mbeki's
comments as "reckless", and a civic grouping, the Democratic
Alternative, telling journalists in Pretoria that the South African
leader had become "a joke". The station reported Mbeki
as having received domestic criticism too, after the country's
Speaker of Parliament, Baleka Mbete, described Harare's suppression
of the election results as "a democratic process gone wrong".
The private electronic media more accurately updated their audiences
on the outcome of the SADC summit. In one story, Studio 7 reported
that although the leaders had "urged" ZEC to release
the presidential results they had "significantly failed"
to take the authorities to task for the delay, widely believed to
be at the instigation of ZANU PF.
In addition, the private
electronic media publicised the MDC's call for a national
strike to press for the immediate release of the election result
following its failed High Court petition to do so. SW Radio Africa
also quoted MDC spokesman Nelson Chamisa saying the MDC would not
accept ZEC's decision to go ahead with a partial recount because
"ZEC has been in custody of the ballot boxes for two weeks
and heaven knows what they have done to the ballot papers".
Figs 1 and 2 show the
sourcing patterns of the public and private electronic media.
Fig
1: Voice distribution on ZBC
| Govt |
ZANU PF |
MDC |
ZEC |
Foreign
Diplomats |
Lawyer |
Unnamed |
Ordinary
people |
2 |
3 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
Fig
2: Voice distribution in the private electronic media
| MDC |
Foreign
Diplomats |
Judiciary |
Lawyer |
Alternative |
Ordinary
people |
6 |
8 |
3 |
6 |
2 |
1 |
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
|