| |
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Media
Update 2008/13
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
May 25, 2008
General
comment
MMPZ expresses its grave concern over the burning
of a delivery truck containing 60 thousand copies of the privately
owned weekly newspaper, The Zimbabwean on Sunday, and the brutal
attack on the driver and his assistant near Chivi, in Masvingo,
on May 23. The paper, launched in February this year, is published
by veteran Zimbabwean journalist Wilf Mbanga and is printed in South
Africa and brought into the country by independent distributors.
The private online agency, Zimdaily (25/5), carried a statement
from the publishers of The Zimbabwean on Sunday saying unknown armed
assailants waylaid the truck and set it ablaze before brutally assaulting
its South African driver, Christmas Ramabulana, and his Zimbabwean
assistant, Tapfumaneyi Kancheta.
The motive for the attack
was not established, but the statement noted that the burning of
the paper came after President Mugabe's chief election agent,
Emmerson Mnangagwa, blamed the paper and its sister publication,
The Zimbabwean, for ZANU PF's electoral defeat in the March
29 elections. Despite frequently being harassed and denounced until
this weekend, Zimdaily observed that "every issue (of the
two papers) had made it safely to Harare where it was distributed . . . and
devoured by a population starved of accurate information and fed
a daily diet of the coarsest government propaganda". Other
private media have also reported this shameful incident, but the
government media censored the news.
MMPZ condemns
this primitive and violent attack on one of the very few sources
of alternative information still available to Zimbabweans, which,
as media watchdog MISA
says, represents a blatant and "unwarranted onslaught on citizens'
right to access alternative information and ideas". In fact,
MMPZ believes that the government media's censorship of the
incident and the silence from the authorities, including the police,
implies they are complicit in this latest atrocity. It reflects
precisely the same shameful silence they have maintained about the
brutal abduction and murder of a number of MDC activists by death
squads in recent weeks, as well as the appalling battering and displacement
suffered by thousands of innocent civilians, mostly at the hands
of youth militia, the security services and people wearing military
uniforms, according to private media reports.
The denial by
the authorities of these most appalling human rights atrocities
and the refusal by the government-controlled media to report them
clearly points the finger of blame at those they wish to protect
and condemns the Zimpapers' products and ZBC's output
to the rubbish bin of discredited propaganda dedicated to hiding
the truth and deceiving the nation. There is no question that those
responsible for these crimes against free expression and the practice
of journalism have abandoned their responsibility to the nation
and will have to be removed and the two institutions entirely rebuilt
whenever Zimbabweans are allowed to exercise the new political dispensation
they so clearly expressed on March 29.
Election focus
The government-controlled media failed to provide any informative
coverage of the electoral environment in the country ahead of the
June 27 presidential run-off between Robert Mugabe and winner of
the first round poll, MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai, despite devoting
168 reports to the subject. Of these, 42 focused on election-related
political violence, 104 on the parties' campaign activities
and election administration (22). The stories selectively accused
the MDC of being the architects of political violence; failed to
give equitable coverage to the contestants as required under domestic
and regional guidelines on election reporting; and inadequately
reported on the authorities' election preparations. The private
electronic media performed somewhat better in their 117 reports
on the subject, comprehensively reporting on the extent of politically
motivated violence (59 stories). But apart from this, they provided
few useful updates on the activities of the contestants (although
they carried 47 stories) and 11 reports on election administration.
Political
violence
With less than a month before Zimbabweans return to the polls to
choose their next president in a run-off, the government media remained
reluctant to expose widespread reports of state-sanctioned violence
against opposition supporters. They only acknowledged the existence
of violence in the context of blaming it exclusively on the MDC,
accusing it of terrorising ZANU PF supporters. ZANU PF's culpability
only appeared in the private and international media. Consequently,
all 14 incidents of politically motivated violence they recorded
in the week portrayed the MDC as the aggressor and ZANU PF as the
victim. However, there was no detailed information in the official
media on the alleged violence against ZANU PF by the MDC except
for generalised allegations from the police and the authorities.
In one case,
The Herald (23/5) gave pride of place on its front-page to police
accusations of the MDC as being a violent organization under a severely
propaganda-afflicted headline: "MDC-T terror gang nabbed".
But in the story neither the paper nor the police provided any evidence
linking the arrested 12 "suspected MDC-T thugs" to any
"terror" in Manicaland except for the assertion that
they were found in possession of "axes, chain blades and sjamboks"
allegedly used to terrorize ZANU PF supporters. There was no attempt
by the paper to interpret the arrests in the context of the ongoing
government clampdown against the opposition. Instead, it passively
quoted police spokesman Oliver Mandipaka claiming that in "most
cases" MDC activists "disguised themselves as ZANU-PF
supporters by wearing the party's regalia" and "beating
people to taint the ruling party's image". Not a shred
of evidence for this claim was provided. ZTV (22/5, 8pm) and Spot
FM (23/5, 8am) committed the same journalistic offence when reporting
the story.
Earlier, ZTV (21/5, 8pm)
and the government dailies (22/5) amplified President Mugabe's
unsubstantiated claims that the MDC was conducting an "evil
crusade aimed at dividing the nation by fanning and sponsoring heinous
violent acts on innocent citizens" during a police pass-out
parade at Morris Depot. They quoted him citing, as an example, the
alleged petrol bombing of a house belonging to a ZANU PF House of
Assembly candidate in Bulawayo by unknown assailants during the
run-up to the March 29 plebiscite. No comment was sought from the
MDC. However, Studio 7 (22/5) quoted an MDC official describing
Mugabe's comments as "utter nonsense", saying
it was actually ZANU PF that was "increasing violence (against
opposition supporters) to ensure a ruling party victory".
The Herald (23/5), Radio
Zimbabwe (23/5, 6am) and Spot FM (23/5, 8am) failed to question
the claim by Acting Attorney-General, Justice Patel, that cases
of political violence were declining throughout the country. Reportedly,
Patel said his office had recorded 80 cases of violence, including
a murder, in six provinces excluding Matabeleland and Midlands,
since May 18. However, these media did not challenge him to give
an informed comparative analysis of the prevalence of the violence
since its outbreak following ZANU PF's loss in the March 29
elections, or identify those responsible.
Only the private
media gave extensive and detailed coverage of the matter in 29 stories.
They recorded 31 incidents of politically motivated violence by
ZANU PF militia, war vets and state security agents against suspected
opposition supporters. Although most of the reports lacked police
corroboration, they were often accompanied by chilling accounts
of brutality from some of the victims, including graphic pictures
of their mutilated bodies. This week alone the private media reported
the murder of two MDC supporters Godfrey Kauzani and Cain Nyeve
and the discovery of the decomposing body of another party activist,
Tonderai Ndira
- kidnapped by armed agents from his Mabvuku home the previous
week - in a Harare hospital mortuary. They reported the MDC
as saying the latest killings put the death toll of its party members
from state-sponsored violence at 45.
Party
campaigns
The official media made nonsense of equitable election reporting
regulations under the country's electoral laws by relaunching
a full-blown propaganda campaign for ZANU PF ahead of the presidential
election run-off. For example, 35 of 46 reports the government papers
carried on the parties' poll preparations favoured ZANU PF
while the remainder were mainly editorials viciously and falsely
attacking the MDC and its leader Morgan Tsvangirai through the use
of hate messages and inflammatory language.
All ZBC's 58 stories
on the topic were used as ZANU PF campaign platforms in which either
party leaders, or those from other political parties, denigrated
the MDC and its alleged Western allies for agitating for illegal
regime change. This blatant support for ZANU PF was illustrated
in the way the national broadcaster disrupted normal programming
to devote more than three hours of live coverage to President Mugabe's
official launch of his election campaign at the party's headquarters
in Harare on Africa Day. That night, ZTV broadcast highlights of
the campaign launch, spanning 1 hour 21 minutes soon after its 8pm
news bulletin. Prior to that, the station had dedicated seven minutes
20 seconds of 33 minutes 50 seconds of its 8pm bulletin (excluding
sport, business and foreign news) to reporting ZANU PF's campaign
launch. However, this overkill coverage did not translate into any
informed coverage.
ZTV (25/5, 8pm)
passively reported Mugabe kicking off his campaign with aggression
and bluster, blaming the country's problems on Western interference.
It quoted him dismissing the MDC as "mere fronts", saying
the run-off actually pitted him against the country's former
colonizers. The station also approvingly reported Mugabe threatening
to "kick out" the US ambassador to Zimbabwe, James McGee,
if he continued to interfere in Zimbabwe's internal affairs,
and chiding Tsvangirai for responding to "orders" from
McGee for him to return to Zimbabwe. This was apparently based on
two severely distorted reports in The Herald earlier, first claiming
that McGee had "ordered" Tsvangirai to "end"
his "self-imposed exile and return home" for the run-off
(22/5) and the next day interpreting Tsvangirai's revelations
to Zimbabwean victims of xenophobic attacks in South Africa that
he would be returning home as evidence that he had "complied"
with the US ambassador's "directive".
The same story
(23/5) also claimed that Tsvangirai's reference linking South
Africa's xenophobic violence to Zimbabwe's political
crisis "seems to confirm suspicion that the violence was orchestrated
by certain elements intent on fuelling anti-Zimbabwe sentiment in
the region" and "forcing Zimbabweans in South Africa
to return home and vote for him". But the story provided no
evidence for this editorialization.
The government
dailies used hate and inflammatory language both in its news stories
and editorials against the MDC and Tsvangirai, contravening Zimbabwe
Electoral Commission Act provisions that "print publishers
(must) ensure that their news media avoid language that . . . encourages
or incites violence . . . or is likely to lead to undue public contempt
towards any political party, candidate or class of persons in Zimbabwe".
Herald columnist David Nyekorach-Matsanga, for example, described
the MDC's secretary-general, Tendai Biti, as a "mad
man" for telling a meeting in Nairobi, Kenya, that MDC was
afraid there were plans to assassinate Tsvangirai on his return
to Zimbabwe (29/5). He also accused Biti of having a "small
mind . . . whose length of lies is only equated by Satan",
adding that in the event that the MDC won next month's poll,
they would, among other things turn Zimbabwe into a "market
place where deranged men walk".
The private
media covered three campaign rallies during the week, two by the
MDC and one by ZANU PF. Otherwise, their reports mainly focused
on the general campaign environment in the country in which they
highlighted ZANU PF's use of violence as a campaign tool and
the dominance of the party's campaign advertisements in the
state media. The Financial Gazette (22/5) reported the MDC accusing
government of denying it democratic space by banning its rallies
and blacking out its advertisements in the state media, while the
Zimbabwe Independent (23/5) viewed the violence as part of ZANU
PF's strategy to win the run-off. The Independent reported
Mugabe as having urged his party to establish a "warlike leadership
to conduct a military-style campaign" during the run-off,
which he described as a "sink-or-swim election". ZimOnline
(23/5) reported the MDC saying the "sustained violence by
ZANU PF militia and soldiers" against its structures and supporters
had "crippled" its campaign for the run-off as ZANU
PF was decimating its "structures from the very lowest levels".
Administrative issues
Both the public and private media paid little attention to important
electoral issues affecting the run-off. They barely assessed the
financial and administrative capacity of ZEC to conduct the plebiscite
smoothly and ensure that the problems that characterized the previous
election did not recur. This was particularly so in light of ZEC's
announcement that there would be no major changes to the number
and location of polling stations and the invitation of observers
and journalists. The government papers simply regurgitated official
opinion on the matter. This was illustrated by The Herald's
coverage (24/5) of a ZEC meeting between ZANU PF and the MDC under
the multiparty liaison committee. The paper did not provide useful
detail on the meeting's deliberations except citing the committee's
chairperson, Sarah Kachingwe, saying the parties held "frank
and constructive discussions".
Similarly, the Sunday News (25/5) merely reported ZEC as having
"stepped up" preparations for the plebiscite by holding
meetings with provincial election officers "in an effort to
reduce the number of complaints against the electoral body"
without clarification.
The private
media continued to question the chances of a free and fair election
in the country, particularly in view of the ongoing violence. They
reported various organisations demanding the early deployment of
observers to stem the violence. For example, Studio 7 (23/5) reported
Tsvangirai calling on SADC to deploy elections monitors "right
away" to ensure peaceful polls, while ZimOnline (22/5) revealed
that Human Rights Watch had written a letter to the AU asking it
to "immediately dispatch monitors . . . to help deter political
violence . . . " In addition, the Independent and ZimOnline
(23/5) reported the MDC as having written to ZEC expressing "loss
of confidence" in its capacity to ensure a free and fair run-off.
The MDC cited, among other issues, the delays in announcing the
presidential results, the controversial recounts in some constituencies
and ZEC's refusal to verify the presidential results.
Figs 1 -
4 show the voice sourcing patterns in the public and private media.
Fig 1:
Voice distribution on ZBC
| Govt |
ZANU PF |
Other Parties |
ZEC |
ZRP |
Alternative |
Judiciary |
8 |
64 |
10 |
3 |
13 |
6 |
1 |
Fig
2: Voice distribution in the government papers
| Govt |
ZANU PF |
MDC |
ZEC |
ZRP |
Alternative |
Foreign
Diplomats |
Judiciary |
Lawyers |
Ordinary
People |
6 |
43 |
6 |
13 |
3 |
7 |
5 |
2 |
3 |
2 |
Fig
3: Voice distribution in the private electronic media
| Govt |
ZANU PF |
MDC |
Other Parties |
ZEC |
ZRP |
Alternative |
Foreign
Diplomats |
Judiciary |
Lawyers |
2 |
1 |
16 |
2 |
1 |
1 |
19 |
5 |
1 |
1 |
Fig
4: Voice distribution in the private Press
| Govt |
ZANU PF |
MDC |
Other Parties |
ZRP |
ZDF |
Alt. |
Foreign
diplomats |
Judiciary |
Lawyers |
Ordinary
People |
1 |
11 |
22 |
6 |
1 |
2 |
12 |
15 |
1 |
2 |
7 |
Visit the MMPZ
fact
sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|