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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Daily
Media Update No.40
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
April 28, 2008
Post-election
focus
Today, the government dailies again took advantage of their monopoly
of the market to suppress important information and supplant this
with blatantly distorted news on the causes of Zimbabwe's
post-election standoff. Conspicuous was The Herald and Chronicle's
deceitful attempts to blame the election stalemate on alleged meddling
by Britain and "its allies" without providing any evidence
of this. They merely advanced conspiracies to sustain their accusations.
In this light they lumped together all those voicing concern over
the post-election crisis as advancing Britain's supposed neo-colonialist
interest in the country. The Herald cartoon aptly illustrated this
distorted perspective. It depicted SADC chairman and Zambian President,
Levy Mwanawasa, as a puppet of British and American interests following
his efforts to find an urgent regionally-mediated solution to the
worsening election impasse.
However, the real culprits
behind the crisis, the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission, whose continued
suppression of the presidential election results has stoked political
tensions, escaped any censure. For example, although the dailies'
Sunday stablemates yesterday reported that ZEC would be inviting
presidential candidates or their election agents to verify the presidential
results today, there was no follow-up whatsoever on the matter;
there was not even an attempt to identify the eight unnamed constituencies
among the 18 where ZEC chairman, George Chiweshe said on Saturday,
the recounting exercise had been completed "without significant
changes" to the original results.
While this news
gave rise to reports in the international media that the recount
had confirmed ZANU PF had lost its parliamentary majority, this
important information remained suppressed in the local media. In
fact, it represents an unforgiveable dereliction of basic journalistic
responsibility not to have reported such a development to a nation
starved of such facts. Equally, there was no news about the other
negative indicators of the results hold-up, such as the post-election
violence, committed mostly by ZANU PF supporters and security agents
against perceived MDC supporters, according to private media reports.
Only those voices that expressed favourable comments about the authorities
received positive coverage. For example, the papers prominently
reported the criticism by Zambia's founding president, Kenneth
Kaunda, of British premier Gordon Brown's calls for an arms
embargo against Zimbabwe, saying he was "not qualified to
comment on the challenges facing Zimbabwe".
However, the
context in which Brown made the statements was not given.They simply
reported Kaunda saying Brown's calls were "misplaced
and do little to solve the problems", adding that Zimbabweans
were "trying to find a way out of their problems by talking
about a government of national unity". But the government
dailies' passive coverage of anything that appeared acceptable
to President Mugabe and his party also led to contradictions. This
was evident in the way The Herald failed to link Kaunda's
talk of a government of national unity with an opinion piece it
carried, Unity government impossible.
The editorial, notable more for its inflammatory and hateful language
against the MDC and the West than for its rationality, merely amplified
the authorities' propagandist refrain of the MDC as a Western
"stooge party" that could never work with ZANU PF. If
this were to happen, it argued, it could be akin to having US President
"George Bush and Osama Bin Laden sharing the White House".
In addition,
its arguments were basically based on assumptions. For example,
it provided no facts to support its portrayal of the MDC as a non-Zimbabwean
party desperate to accept a unity of government in "whatever
form'' or that the party "has the worst history
of all forms of intimidation and violence". Neither did it
authenticate its "indications" that none of the presidential
contestants won an outright majority in the presidential poll to
justify its calls for a run-off. The editorial even suggested that
if he were to win in the election, Tsvangirai should not be allowed
to rule the country since he was a Western creation and thus would
reverse the gains of the liberation struggle.
It argued: "We have accommodated Tsvangirai and his misguided
elements to live in our free Zimbabwe but trying to force us to
allow him to rule Zimbabwe even without a mandate is being provocative."
Another Herald
editorial by Peter Mavunga, advanced a similarly dangerous argument.
It reported black audiences of a British community radio station,
Radio Galaxy, as having been generally "appalled by the prospect
of seeing Zimbabwe's gains lost through the elections of March
29" during a "phone-in" discussion on Zimbabwe.
Such editorials represent an appalling abuse of the media in the
promotion of ideas that incite hatred and disaffection against a
legitimate party that has clearly become more popular than ZANU
PF. Worse still, these articles suggest that democracy might have
to be abandoned in order to protect the gains of the liberation
struggle. Are these the first signs of an attempt to legitimize
in the public mind the possibility of a coup against the popular
will of the people?
To reinforce this impression the government dailies continued to
portray President Mugabe and ZANU PF as the only ones with the interests
of Zimbabweans at heart and thus indispensable. For example, The
Herald, reprinted the remarks of "Industry Minister"
Obert Mpofu at the official launch of the Zimbabwe International
Trade Fair last Friday, reverently describing Mugabe as a "legendary
revolutionary", "luminary", and "outstanding
statesmen", among a host of other glowing terms.
Fig
1: Voice distribution in The Herald and Chronicle
| Govt |
Foreign
Diplomats |
1 |
6 |
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