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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Daily
Media Update No.38
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
April 26, 2008
Post-election
focus
The government dailies maintained their propaganda blitz against
those drawing attention to Zimbabwe's post-election crisis.
They diverted attention away from the substance of their critical
observations on the current hostile electoral stalemate with generalised
conspiracies of alleged Western plots to 'illegally'
remove President Mugabe from power.
Consequently, nothing
was said about the official silence over the outcome of the presidential
election, whose winner remains undeclared 28 days after the plebiscite.
Neither was there any attempt to address the controversy over government's
irregularly extended term of office. This is especially so in light
of the authorities' apparent abuse of state agencies to engage
in alleged post-election attacks against opposition supporters ahead
of an anticipated run-off between Mugabe and MDC president, Morgan
Tsvangirai.
The papers simply
presented all government officials' dealings as normal, including
their manipulation of otherwise national events to campaign for
ZANU PF while railing against perceived opponents. For example,
The Herald and Chronicle passively reported President Mugabe reducing
international concerns over the disastrous effects of the delay
in the release of the presidential election results to a land question
standoff between Zimbabwe and Britain. Speaking at the official
opening of the Zimbabwe International Trade Fair in Bulawayo, the
papers quoted him saying: "When the West - led by the
British - shamelessly continue to denounce our country, what
is our crime? We are simply defending our birthright, defending
our hard-worn national sovereignty." How the country's
independence has any bearing on the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission's
late release of the presidential poll result remained unexplained.
They simply quoted him saying: "Better all those who shake
and quiver at every word of our colonial masters please know Zimbabwe
will never be for sale . . . and will never be a colony again."
In other reports, the
dailies also passively reported Patrick Chinamasa, presented as
Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Minister, describing as "patently
false, inflammatory, irresponsible" claims by US Assistant
Secretary of State for African Affairs Jendayi Fraser that Tsvangirai
won "outright" in the March 29 harmonised polls. Without
giving the full context in which Fraser made the statements, except
that she claimed Mugabe was "trying to steal the election
through a recount and should step down for Tsvangirai", the
papers cited Chinamasa reiterating his previous claims that unofficial
results pointed to a run-off.
Why the results
remain off the record was not addressed. Neither was there any attempt
to investigate the motive behind government's defence of the
results delay. The papers reported Chinamasa criminalising Fraser's
observations, saying she "has no moral or legal authority
to make unfounded announcements on our domestic processes".
Instead, they allowed Chinamasa to claim that Fraser's remarks
exposed Tsvangirai and the MDC as an "Anglo-American project
designed to defeat and reverse the gains of Zimbabwe's liberation
struggle, to undermine the will of the Zimbabwean electorate and
return the nation to the dark days of white domination."
Even SADC countries
that dared express their disapproval of the unfolding crisis in
the country were not spared. For example, Herald columnist, Nathaniel
Manheru, ignored the context in which regional countries refused
to facilitate the delivery of a Chinese arms consignment to Zimbabwe
in a vituperative tirade that portrayed them as puppets of Western
imperialism. The columnist, for example, accused these countries
of being "dimwits - clearly emboldened by imaginary
British and American support" for their "harebrained . . . contemptuous
attempt to turn it (Zimbabwe) into the SADC village leper".
Manheru presented the arms purchase as a normal activity and in
isolation of the post-election tensions in the country, amid serious
allegations that state security agents were heavily involved in
the purge of opposition supporters in the countryside.
The Herald and
Chronicle also reported as perfectly normal the police raids on
the headquarters of the MDC and offices of the independent election
watchdog, ZESN,
resulting in the arrests and detention of around 215 opposition
supporters. The papers highlighted police justification of the raids
while relegating to the end of the report complaints by MDC spokesperson
Nelson Chamisa that the police raided the premises with no search
warrant and that most of those arrested were "victims"
of ZANU PF's politically motivated violence in the rural areas,
seeking sanctuary. The papers, for example, quoted police spokesperson
Wayne Bvudzijena claiming that those arrested were responsible for
post-election violence against ZANU PF supporters.
Drawing parallels with another police raid on the MDC offices last
year, Bvudzijena claimed the MDC was harbouring fugitives from the
law in the same way the opposition party had sheltered suspects
in an outbreak of terror bombings in March last year. However, Bvudzijena
omitted the fact that the so-called terror bomb suspects were absolved
of any crime by the courts for lack of evidence. Neither did the
papers remind him, nor question him about whether the police were
investigating numerous reports of ZANU PF violence against the opposition.
In addition, the papers
reported that that the police had searched ZESN offices seeking
evidence showing that ZEC officials "were paid through ZESN
to corruptly alter the outcome of the March 29 elections".
No comment was sought from ZESN about this absurd claim, or even
ZEC, especially in view of the fact that the results of the recounted
constituencies substantially reflect the original figures returned.
Although the papers reported
on the release of seven more House of Assembly results from the
poll recounts, there was still no news on the fate of the presidential
election or when the recounting exercise would be completed. Moreover,
the papers did not question the logic behind the exercise given
that so far - with 10 result declared - there has been no
change in the original outcome, with the parties retaining their
original seats.
Fig 1 illustrates the
sourcing pattern in the government dailies.
Fig
1: Voice distribution in The Herald and Chronicle
| Govt |
ZANU PF |
MDC |
ZRP |
Lawyers |
5 |
3 |
1 |
3 |
5 |
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