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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Daily
Media Update No.31
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
April 19, 2008
Post
election focus
The government-controlled papers (The Herald, Chronicle 19/4) continued
in their cheerleading role for ZANU PF and President Mugabe in the
17 post-election stories they carried today.
Enjoying a monopoly
on the market today, the two dailies gave extensive but passive
coverage to yesterday's Independence Day celebrations'
rhetoric by President Mugabe and ZANU PF while insisting that there
was no political crisis in the country. The papers also carried
a court report on the MDC-T's bid to bar the Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission from recounting the votes in 23 constituencies, which
was contaminated by news of a late night attempt to petrol bomb
the offices of the Gutu district administrator where the ballots
for three constituencies were being held.
The papers reported
that Justice Antonia Guvava had dismissed the MDC-T application
with costs and quoted her saying "I have gone through the
Electoral Act.
I find no merit in the application. Accordingly, the application
is dismissed with costs." But there was no effort to explain
how she had come to this conclusion, particularly in view of the
MDC's argument that the requests for a recount by ZANU PF
were not made within 48 hours of the announcement of results. Nor
did they link this to the provisions of the Electoral Act. Neither
of the papers gave any prominence to the vote recounts to be conducted
today. They simply tagged a list of the affected constituencies
onto the end of the court story.
However, they
provided massively prominent coverage to Mugabe's Independence
Day speech, and the rhetorical echoes from those other ZANU PF officials
presiding at various Independence Day celebrations at regional centres
around the country. For example, the papers passively quoted Mugabe
attacking the MDC-T and Britain saying attempts by the British to
colonize Zimbabwe through their local puppets would never succeed.
He added that, "we, not the British, established democracy
based on one-person-one-vote, democracy which rejected
gender and racial discrimination and upheld human rights and religious
freedoms."
There was no effort to compare this bizarre claim with ZEC's
failure to release the presidential election results three weeks
after polling and the increasing concern this has given rise to
around the world.
Mugabe made promises that government was working on the economic
problems facing Zimbabweans, although these were not viewed in the
context of the intense economic crisis gripping the country.The
Herald reproduced the full text of Mugabe's speech and carried
full colour pictures of the celebrations.
Both government papers quoted senior ZANU PF officials such as Industry
Minister in the dissolved Cabinet, Obert Mpofu, and the Mashonaland
East governor Ray Kaukonde urging Zimbabweans to "remain vigilant"
and to "defend our land and resources" against the British.
The usual unverified and sensational conspiracy claims also found
space in the two dailies. For example, the Midlands Governor in
the old government, Cephas Msipa, was quoted in the Chronicle telling
farmers in Gokwe to vote for President Mugabe to ensure that they
continued to enjoy the fruits of independence. He alleged that,
"our enemies are working hard that even the maize grain does
not get to the intended people."
Columnist Nathaniel Manheru, in The Herald endorsed this allegation
claiming that Zambia had deliberately delayed the maize consignment
bought by Zimbabwe and this had "very deep significance in
bringing out the Zambian government's politics towards Zimbabwe."
Unwittingly revealing that the importation of maize during the campaign
period was a vote-buying gimmick by the ruling party, Manheru said
during the election "it was the stomach, not a free future,
which decided matters. ZANU PF had entrusted its voting stomach
to the Zambians who fixed it by dilating."
Notably, the papers continued to insist that there was no crisis
in the country as a result of the delay in the release of the presidential
results. For instance, The Herald gave prominence to a South African
Press Association (Sapa) report that quoted South African President
Thabo Mbeki saying "loud diplomacy" was no diplomacy.
Mbeki added that ZEC should not be rushed into completing its work
and that he had been misquoted on his famous "no crisis"
assessment of Zimbabwe. Mbeki was quoted saying his declaration
was in response to a question about "the elections . . . not
about the socio-economic conditions or anything like that."
The paper said Zimbabwe's economic and social problems were
"largely a result of illegal economic sanctions imposed by
the West - at the instigation of Britain, the European Union and
the United States . . . ." Both papers used the comments of
the Democratic Republic of Congo Ambassador to Zimbabwe, Mawampanga
Mwanananga, to reinforce the authorities' claim that there
is no crisis in the country.
Mwanananga said all "progressive forces in Africa" should
open their eyes and be alert as "our former colonizers are
now trying to teach us on how we should conduct our elections."
He gave the example of Belgium which delayed releasing its election
results for eight months "but there were no attempts by the
West to put the country on the UN Security Council agenda."
He was not asked to give the context to those elections.
Fig 1 illustrates
the sourcing pattern in the government controlled Press.
Fig
1: Voice distribution in the government-controlled press
Govt
|
ZANU
PF |
Simba
Makoni
|
ZEC |
ZRP |
Foreign
diplomats |
Judiciary |
Lawyers |
Police |
Farmer |
Unamed |
|
5 |
8 |
1 |
3 |
2 |
8 |
2 |
6 |
2 |
2 |
1 |
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