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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Daily
Media Update No.44
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
May 02, 2008
Post
election focus
The Herald and Chronicle continued to deflect attention from Zimbabwe's
post-election crisis, including ZANU PF's historic defeat
to the MDC in the March 29 parliamentary and presidential elections,
with propagandist onslaughts against the West and the opposition
over the country's problems.
Although they carried updates on the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission's
ongoing "verification" of the inordinately delayed presidential
election results, they did not attempt to establish the winner of
the poll. This was even after yesterday's leakage of the results
by the authorities, whose official confirmation today showed that
MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai had won the poll by 47.9 percent against
Robert Mugabe's 42.3, paving the way for a run-off.
There was also still no acknowledgement in the government dailies
of the MDC victory in the parliamentary elections nearly a week
after the completion of recounts in 23 constituencies where ZANU
PF alleged ballot tampering.
The Herald, for example, simply reported that the results of the
House of Assembly, Senate and council polls have since been announced.
Neither did the official dailies expose the state-sanctioned crackdown
on dissenting voices across the country. These issues only found
space in the private weeklies, The Financial Gazette (1/5) and the
Zimbabwe Independent (2/5).
The ZANU PF dailies, for example, passively reported ZEC as having
presented its official results of the presidential poll to the candidates'
representatives for "comparison" with the contestants'
own figures without seeking to establish the ZEC figures.
They also did not establish the extent to which the MDC and independent
candidate Langton Towungana's results did not "tally"
with ZEC's, or what the results were. Instead, they rehashed
previous claims by ZANU PF's Patrick Chinamasa that results
from ZANU PF, MDC and independent monitors had shown that "no
candidate garnered the mandatory 51 percent to be declared the outright
winner". Otherwise, the rest of the 10 election-related stories
that the official dailies carried either sought to build ZANU PF
and President Mugabe's images or simply demonised the West
and the opposition for seeking to remove ZANU PF illegally. For
example, The Herald and Chronicle reported Senegalese President
Abdoulaye Wade delivering a "special message of solidarity
to President Mugabe and the people of Zimbabwe" in the country's
post-election crisis, but censored any critical remarks about the
authorities' delay of the presidential results.
This selective coverage of the matter was also evident in the way
the dailies covered Workers' Day celebrations.
While the Chronicle accused the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions of aligning themselves with the MDC
by "chanting the . . . party's slogans and politics
at the expense of propagating issues affecting workers", there
was no such critical examination of the rival Zimbabwe Federation
of Trade Unions' open support for ZANU PF at their May Day
commemorations.
The Herald, for example, passively reported ZFTU President Joseph
Chinotimba criticising the Confederation of South African Trade
Unions for influencing the South African Transport Workers union
to protest against the offloading of a consignment of arms destined
for Zimbabwe in isolation of the state-sanctioned violence against
ZANU PF opponents. He was quoted saying: "It is common knowledge
that any country should defend itself and as workers we need peace
and sanity to prevail and, therefore, there is nothing sinister
about the weapons."
In fact, apart from a ZANU PF campaign disguised as a donation by
President Mugabe's wife, Grace, to victims of political violence
in Manicaland, the government papers suppressed news on the endemic
purge. The paper only carried a brief court report on its page three
in which seven ZANU PF supporters were accused of assaulting resettled
farmers in Beatrice.
In contrast, the private weeklies gave informed and extensive coverage
of the topic in 32 reports. These included updates on the escalating
post-election violence, recording nine incidents, and the international
community's revulsion at the unfolding events.They also highlighted
how the authorities had leaked the presidential results to the international
media before their verification had been completed in a bid to sustain
their pursuit of a run-off.
In its lead story, The Zimbabwe Independent reported that ZEC was
faced with a fresh problem "sparked off by ZEC's leakage
of official results to defeated ZANU PF leaders" who then
passed them on to the international media. It quoted the MDC saying
"it was shocked by the conduct of ZEC and ZANU PF officials,
who after failing to release the figures for more than a month,
leaked the results to the 'hostile media'".
The same story also contended that Tsvangirai was set to participate
in the imminent presidential run-off despite his public remarks
saying he wouldn't. It cited as evidence an alleged pact recently
signed between the two formations of the MDC in which they agreed
to campaign together "to ensure Tsvangirai wins the run-off
election".
The Independent also questioned the logic behind ZANU PF's
demands for vote recounts. Its Muckraker column argued that after
the recounts, "nothing systematic" had been found that
could prove electoral fraud and did not warrant "the politically-inspired
arrest of polling agents". Both the Independent and the Gazette
highlighted the police intensifying its blitz against civic society.
These included police raids at NGOs: Crisis
Coalition, Centre for Research and Development and Plan International
in Mutoko.
In addition, The Financial Gazette reported that most schools had
failed to open for the second term as most teachers faced intimidation
and violent retribution from alleged militants for ZANU PF's
electoral defeat.
The weeklies also revealed that the US was considering whether broaden
its sanctions list to include more than 200 senior military officials
allegedly deployed in the country's 10 provinces to spearhead
the violence campaign.
They reported US ambassador to Zimbabwe James McGee telling a Press
conference that he was "personally" recording the incidents
of violence and interviewing the victims of the alleged terror campaign
and had since forwarded a dossier to the Zimbabwe government containing
pictures of the assaulted villagers.
Said McGee: "We have affidavits; we have the names of the
perpetrators. We know the perpetrators and there will be justice
at the end of the day."
Reportedly, McGee said he had since handled 500 cases, one of which
attributed the violence to the MDC.
"The government of Zimbabwe asked us for evidence (of violence).
We have availed it", the Gazette quoted him saying.
Figs 1 and 2
illustrate the sourcing patterns in the official and private Press.
Fig 1. Voice distribution in The Herald and Chronicle
| Govt |
ZANU PF |
MDC |
ZEC |
Alternative |
Foreign
Diplomats |
Media |
|
2 |
3 |
2 |
2 |
4 |
3 |
1 |
Fig
2. Voice distribution in The Financial Gazette and Zimbabwe Independent
| ZANU PF
|
MDC |
ZEC |
ZRP |
Alternative |
Foreign
Diplomats |
Lawyers |
Media |
Unnamed |
|
1 |
9 |
1 |
5 |
14 |
14 |
2 |
4 |
4 |
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