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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Forcing
the media back on message
Jabu
Shoko, Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
May 21, 2008
http://www.iwpr.net/?p=zim&s=f&o=344743&apc_state=henh
State broadcaster in
shake-up as authorities galvanize their own forces while hounding
the opposition.
As Zimbabwe braces for
what many fear will be a bloody run-off election next month, ZANU-PF's
powerful central committee has shifted into top gear to make sure
President Robert Mugabe reverses the electoral defeat he suffered
on March 29.
In addition to widespread
intimidation spearheaded by militias in areas where voters backed
Morgan Tsvangirai and the Movement for Democratic Change, MDC, the
authorities are tightening up control over the state media.
On May 14, the
government dismissed
Henry Muradzikwa, chief executive at the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation,
ZBC, apparently for failing to slant coverage towards President
Mugabe and ZANU-PF ahead of the first round of elections, held on
March 29.
Insider sources say the
ZBC got the blame for carrying MDC political adverts that were better
than the ones produced by ZANU-PF.
Muradzikwa's replacement
was named as Happison Muchechetere, a senior broadcast journalist
at the station and a staunch ZANU-PF loyalist.
Within days of taking
over at ZBC, Muchechetere rejigged its programming, replacing popular
soap operas at prime viewing time with documentaries from the archives,
mostly glorifying Mugabe's role in the 1970s war of liberation,
but some of them demonizing Tsvangirai and his alleged western backers.
ZANU-PF has beefed up
its own PR and media arm ahead of the second-round presidential
election, scheduled for June 27. A revamped sub-committee on information
and publicity will be led by Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa,
a hardline Mugabe ally.
According to ZBC insiders,
the committee has effectively taken over the running of the state
media including the broadcaster, and has a brief to run a sustained
propaganda campaign in support of Mugabe.
Other members of the
media committee include Webster Shamu, Mugabe's minister of
policy implementation, Chris Mutsvangwa, a former chief executive
of ZBC, and George Charamba, the permanent secretary for information
and publicity, who writes a vitriolic weekly column in the government
mouthpiece, The Herald.
Journalists say Charamba
recently read the riot act to the editors of all the government-run
newspapers, telling them in no uncertain terms they should not publish
stories which "put Tsvangirai and the MDC in a good light".
Useni Sibanda, a political
analyst who works as a coordinator for the Christian Alliance, said
the government had moved to close off the small amount of media
space afforded to Tsvangirai and the MDC prior to the March 29 polls.
He said the sacking of Muradzikwa showed that ZANU-PF would not
tolerate any view other than its own.
As well as its new media
body, ZANU-PF has also established special committees to improve
the availability of food and public transport - seen as key
election issues.
These committees are
clearly intended to push through quick-fix economic measures in
the hope that this will encourage wavering voters to support Mugabe.
ZANU-PF's food
committee is already distributing maize meal, the staple diet, and
is setting up "People's Shops" where scarce basic
commodities are being sold at controlled prices.
"We have realized
that people were hungry when they went to the polls," party
spokesman Nathan Shamuyarira told The Herald, according to AFP news
agency.
The distribution
of basic foodstuffs follows last week's scrapping
of import duty on groceries, and the May 2 decision to float
the Zimbabwean dollar which succeeded in persuading many people
to change their foreign currency at the banks at the attractive
new rate, rather than on the black market. This ensured an influx
of much-needed foreign currency into the banks, where the authorities
can access it to fund their pre-election strategy.
Finally, the party has
instructed the monopoly Grain Marketing Board to regularly review
the price it pays farmers for maize. With effect from this week,
farmers are now being paid cash for consignments of up to five tonnes,
with transport laid on for no cost.
Meanwhile, the Reserve
Bank of Zimbabwe, RBZ, has reportedly been ordered to print money
to underwrite the regime's new-found largesse and finance
procurements of fuel, maize and farm machinery, as well as wages
for the security services and paramilitaries who are carrying out
a campaign of intimidation on the ground.
A new unrestrained emission
of money is unlikely to help the Zimbabwean dollar, which has plunged
from 30,000 to the US dollar, at which it was artificially held
from September 2007 to May 2, to reach 255 million to one on May
16, the last day for which the RBZ website published rates. (See
Pre-Election Sweeteners for Zimbabwe Voters, ZCR No. 146, 16-May-08.)
Mugabe made clear his
intention to galvanise his party in a speech to its central committee
on May 16.
In the March 29 joint
elections, which the MDC won more seats in parliament than ZANU-PF
and Mugabe performed worse than Tsvangirai, although election officials
ruled that a run-off was necessary because neither candidate got
over 50 per cent of the vote. It was, Mugabe told central committee
members, "a dismal result".
"As [party] leaders,
we all share the blame, from the national level to that of the branch
chairman. We played truant; we did not lead, we misled; we did not
encourage, rather we discouraged; we did not unite, we divided;
we did not inspire, we dispirited; we did not mobilise, we demobilised,"
he said, arguing that ZANU-PF went into the elections a "bickering
and divided party" and failed to mobilise a "sleeping
vote" that rightfully belonged to it.
"We have a crucial
run-off ahead of us. We must use it to repair the damage and shortcomings
which we suffered in the harmonised polls," he said.
Mugabe's call appears
to have been heeded. Sources in ZANU-PF have told IWPR that key
personnel both in the party and in government are being replaced
in a bid to deliver an election victory.
"Money is not a
problem," said a senior ZANU-PF insider, speaking on condition
of anonymity.
The formula of tighter
control over ZANU-PF and government agencies like the media and
economic sweeteners for the population augment the authorities'
strategy of intimidating its opponents, especially in constituencies
once seen as ZANU-PF strongholds but captured by the MDC in the
parliamentary polls.
Analysts say the violence
has created no-go areas for the opposition in much of rural Mashonaland,
Manicaland and Masvingo.
MDC spokesman
Nelson Chamisa says the death toll of opposition supporters and
sympathizers is rising day by day, reaching
42 as of May 20. He has also alleged that injured opposition
supporters have been denied medical treatment at government hospitals,
at the same time as thousands of others are displaced by the violence,
thus ensuring that they cannot vote.
"We have cases
where people perceived to be opposition supporters have their identity
documents confiscated or burnt," added Chamisa.
Eldred Masunungure,
a professor of political science at the University
of Zimbabwe, said the range of strategies deployed by ZANU-PF
showed how determined it was to get Mugabe re-elected.
Masunungure said that
if the outcome of the June 27 election was to be accepted as legitimate,
it was essential for the Southern African Development Community,
SADC, the African Union, AU, and other international observers to
be allowed to supervise and monitor the polls,
"But every fair-minded
person realises that the current volatile political climate is not
conducive for free and fair elections," he added. "ZANU
and Mugabe are determined to win at all costs. They are leaving
nothing to chance to bag this election."
Masunungure believes
the mood of optimism that preceded the first round has now changed,
and argued, "The psychological make-up emanating from the
violence is that prospective voters are not likely to vote. They
are already being guided by fear of retribution."
Sibanda agreed, noting,
"There is so much violence that it is impossible to talk of
free and fair elections. ZANU-PF is using all manner of tricks to
win the polls."
Chinamasa has ruled out
inviting western observers or anyone else perceived to be sympathetic
to the opposition. He has also said the election observers invited
to the first round will have to be re-accredited.
There are concerns
that non-governmental organisations like the Zimbabwe
Electoral Support Network, ZESN, will not be allowed to do their
work this time around. ZESN organised a vote tabulation in parallel
with the official count.
*Jabu Shoko
is a pseudonym for a journalist in Zimbabwe.
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