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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Weekly
Media Update 2008/14
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
June 01, 2008
General
comment
As this report was being compiled news that seven senior journalists
at the national public broadcaster had been sent
on forced leave provided more evidence that the government-controlled
media was being transformed into a fully-fledged propaganda machine
for ZANU PF ahead of the June 27 presidential election run-off between
MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai and President Mugabe.
The seven included general
manager of television production at ZBC, Robson Mhandu; TV production
manager, Lawrence Maphosa; news editor, Patrice Makova; producers
Sibonginkosi Mlilo and Monica Gavera; and three reporters. The suspensions
come amid earlier reports that ZANU PF had demanded a total monopoly
of the radio and television airwaves in the run-up to the poll.
It also comes hard on the heels of the sacking of ZBC's chief
executive, Henry Muradzikwa, for allegedly failing to provide sufficient
support for ZANU PF's campaign in the March 29 elections,
and defying ministerial orders to deny the MDC favourable coverage.
Happison Muchechetere, a war veteran and staunch ruling party supporter,
has since replaced Muradzikwa.
The private
online publication, ZimOnline (5/6), reported that no official reasons
were given for the suspension of the seven, except that they "failed
to act in a manner that is in accordance with their contracts".
However, the agency contended the journalists were suspended for
"failing to run a favourable campaign for President Mugabe's
government, which lost elections to the opposition in March".
It quoted Zimbabwe
Union of Journalists' president, Matthew Takaona, saying
the suspensions were "irrational" and "seemed
motivated by political considerations".
Local media
watchdog, MISA,
also expressed its "gravest concerns" over the "deliberate
purging of journalists at the state broadcaster for the purposes
of partisan political expediency on the part of those that are still
in charge of the state media". It said it viewed the move
as part of an "orchestrated campaign to intimidate not only
state media personnel, but the media fraternity as a whole"
ahead of the election. MISA also said that it had noted "a
sharp turn for the worse" in media freedom violations through
intimidation, arrest and conviction of journalists since March 29.
ZBC remained
silent on the matter while the government papers carried the news
as a brief on page two (The Herald, 5/6). MMPZ is also obliged to
condemn in the strongest terms this latest arbitrary and authoritarian
assault on media freedom, which underlines the authorities'
hijacking of the public media and subverting their public mandate
to ensure their content solely reflects the truth and philosophy
according to ZANU PF.
The government's
determined drive to silence all alternative sources of information
from reaching Zimbabweans ahead of the election run-off has seen
the arrest and harassment of all manner of individuals, including
the MDC's presidential candidate and other opposition party
officials, human rights defenders from civil society and a number
of media workers from the private and international media in recent
days. In one such case, lawyers representing three South Africans
convicted of illegally possessing broadcasting equipment the state
says belongs to Britain's Sky News TV, had appealed against
what was described as a harsh six-month jail term imposed on the
three.
Election focus
THE government media gave a narrow perspective of the country's
electoral environment in the run-up to the June 27 election run-off
between MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai and the incumbent president,
Robert Mugabe. They continued to make nonsense of the country's
electoral laws and regional guidelines governing the conduct of
democratic elections by providing extensive and favourable coverage
to ZANU PF campaign activities while vilifying the MDC.
There was also no holistic
coverage of the widespread political violence in the country, which
they exclusively blamed on the MDC, or any informed coverage of
the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission's preparations to hold the
poll. This was evident in all the 154 reports that they featured
on the topic: political violence (38), parties' campaigns
(104) and electoral management (12). Only the private media gave
critical updates on these issues in 159 reports of which 88 were
on political violence, campaigns (43) and poll administration (28).
Political violence
THE official media narrowly attributed all cases of political violence
to the MDC while censoring prevalent private media reports of state-sponsored
attacks against suspected opposition supporters. They mainly restricted
themselves to amplifying ZANU PF and police accusations of the MDC
as a violent party without making any attempt to independently verify
these claims.
As a result, all nine
incidents the government media recorded blamed the MDC with ZANU
PF supporters the victims. They comprised five arson attacks, assaults
and two fatal shootings. Only the killings were fresh cases, while
the rest were only given currency through follow-up features, especially
in the wake of official visits to the victims and scenes of the
violence.
The official
media's desperation to portray the MDC as being responsible
for the violence was illustrated by The Sunday Mail's coverage
(1/6) of the shooting of ZANU PF supporters in Mutoko. It accused
the MDC of the violence in a front-page headline: MDC gunmen kill
two ZANU PF supporters, despite carrying no evidence linking the
opposition party to the crime.
The story just reported police spokesman Oliver Mandipaka narrating
the events leading to the killing of the two by unidentified gunmen,
only noting that their "preliminary investigations show that
these are politically motivated cases".
The government media's
coverage of the other incidents of politically motivated violence
were also biased and preoccupied with highlighting the victims'
loyalty to ZANU PF and their bravery in light of the alleged MDC
attacks rather than attempting to establish the circumstances leading
to the violence.
For example,
The Herald (31/5) did not establish the reasons behind the alleged
MDC attack on ZANU PF activists in Shamva except for its own speculation
that it "was apparently sparked by a well-attended ZANU PF
meeting . . . which riled opposition youths, who had wanted people
to ignore the meeting". None of the victims of the violence
were cited confirming this. Neither did the paper query the plausibility
of claims by one of the victims, Gorezvarimwa Chiyanikwa, that he
had single-handedly "confronted" the 100 MDC attackers
at his home, who then "fled". Instead, the paper widely
quoted Chiyanikwa telling President Mugabe and his wife, Grace,
who were "visiting the victims of the violence to assist in
rebuilding" their lives, of his unyielding support for ZANU
PF even in the face of the attacks.
In another incident,
Spot FM (27/5, 1pm) and ZTV (28/5, 8pm) reported six ZANU PF activists
as battling for their lives at Murambinda hospital after having
been "brutally attacked" by MDC supporters in Buhera.
No evidence was provided linking the MDC to the violence, nor was
police corroboration sought.
In contrast,
the private media gave more detailed accounts of the violence. They
published 42 incidents of political violence during the week. Of
these, 38 named ZANU PF militia, war vets and state security agents
as being responsible, while four accused the MDC.
In addition, they reported
the MDC alleging that the violence had so far claimed 50 lives and
displaced more than 25 000 of its supporters. Studio 7, SW Radio
Africa (28/5) and The Zimbabwe Times (29/5) recorded the UN Commissioner
for Human Rights, Louise Arbour, expressing "shock"
at the "escalating politically motivated extra-judicial killings".
In fact, despite
the Zimbabwe National Army's repeated denials that soldiers
and other state security agents had been deployed in the rural areas
to intimidate villagers to vote for President Mugabe, The Financial
Gazette (29/5) reported the High Court as having ordered the deployed
soldiers to be recalled. The paper said the interim order followed
an application by Buhera West MP-elect Eric Matinenga claiming that
the presence of the soldiers in the rural areas, especially in his
constituency, was unconstitutional and violated the provisions of
the Defence Act. This important court ruling was censored by the
government media.
Party campaigns
Barely three weeks before the run-off, the government media remained
impervious to the country's Electoral
Act, which compels them to give equitable coverage to contestants
in an election. They continued to give ZANU PF massive publicity
while blacking out the
electoral preparations of the MDC. The official media carried 91
positive reports on ZANU PF campaign activities, while all its 13
stories on the MDC were mostly in the form of unsubstantiated conspiracies,
presenting the opposition as a Western front without providing any
credible evidence.
All ZANU-PF's electoral
preparations were reported ingratiatingly favourably. This was evident
in the official media's approving coverage of Mugabe's
presidential election launch on Africa Day and his tour of scenes
of alleged political violence against his party supporters, where
they extensively reported him lashing out at his opponents and critics
using inflammatory and derogatory language.
ZTV (26/5, 8pm), for
example, passively quoted him likening US Assistant Secretary of
State for African Affairs Jendayi Fraser to a "prostitute"
for allegedly celebrating the MDC's March 29 poll victory
during a tour of some SADC countries. Other ZANU PF officials such
as Emmerson Mnangagwa, Vice President Joseph Msika and Elliot Manyika
were passively cited making similar comments.
The Herald (26/5) and
ZTV (26/5, 8pm), for example, reported Msika describing Tsvangirai
as the "worst sell-out to emerge" from Africa's
"entire history". No evidence of this was given except
for Msika's claims that the opposition leader was moving from
"one country to another selling out".
Similarly, there was
no querying the service chiefs' continued disparaging utterances
against the opposition whilst simultaneously campaigning for ZANU
PF despite their high public office standing.
The Herald (31/5) reported
a senior ZNA officer, Martin Chedondo, ordering soldiers to support
Mugabe in the run-off or "remove that uniform". The
paper failed to test the veracity of his claims that under the country's
constitution soldiers were obliged to support their commander-in-chief,
President Mugabe, against Tsvangirai in the run-off. It passively
quoted Chedondo saying: "Soldiers are not apolitical. Only
mercenaries are . . . We have signed and agreed to fight and protect
the ruling party's principles of defending the revolution".
The Herald also failed
to examine the implications of his declaration to soldiers that
"you are going to be given duties to protect parents who are
being stabbed, axed and whose houses have been burnt by suspected
MDC-T supporters . . . ", especially in view of widespread
claims of soldiers' involvement in the violence against opposition
supporters.
The government media
also made use of falsehoods and distortions to try to link the US
to an "illegal" regime change agenda in the country.
For example, the two government dailies (28/5) tried to create a
furore out of nothing when they falsely reported that US "ambassador"
to South Africa, Patrick Diskin, had "sneaked" into
Zimbabwe through the Plumtree Border Post to discuss "confidential
matters" with McGee. How exactly Diskin's entry into
the country could be described as sneaking remained unclear.
The paper simply tried
to build a case on the matter by citing an unnamed government official
as saying the authorities were "very interested" as
they found the "timing and the route used" by Diskin
as "very odd". Even when the US embassy pointed out
The Herald's mistake through a Press statement, noting that
Diskin was not the US ambassador to South Africa, but a regional
Food for Peace programme director with the US Agency for International
Development (USAID) on a "routine visit", the paper
(29/5) would not relent. It merely shifted its focus to accusing
Western-backed NGOs of having helped the MDC to campaign in the
March 29 elections "using food".
The private media's
coverage of parties' campaigns was more balanced: ZANU PF
(25) and MDC (18). The reports criticized ZANU PF's use of
intimidation, violence and vote-buying to induce voters to vote
for Mugabe, and highlighted the difficulties the MDC was facing
in its campaigning due to a hostile political environment. The private
media also noted the utterances by ZANU PF officials at rallies,
which they argued were not only inflammatory but undermined the
country's electoral process.
SW Radio Africa (30/5),
for example, cited as an example, comments by Mugabe's wife
while donating goods to victims of violence in Shamva that even
if Mugabe lost the election Tsvangirai, the MDC leader "will
never step inside State House . . . Baba (Mugabe) will only leave
State House to make way for someone from ZANU PF".
At the weekend, The Standard
(1/6) reported commentators criticizing Major General Martin Chedondo's
assertions that soldiers should vote for Mugabe in the run-off because
he is their commander-in-chief as "mischievous and in breach
of the constitution". It cited constitutional law expert Lovemore
Madhuku dismissing Chedondo's declaration as "mischief
coming from someone who does not understand the constitution".
Madhuku said the commander-in-chief of the defence forces of Zimbabwe
was not "Robert Mugabe, but the President of Zimbabwe".
So the army had to await the outcome of the run-off and "salute
and protect" whoever wins "in a democratic process".
Administrative
issues
The official media gave little meaningful attention to electoral
authorities' poll preparations and changes to electoral regulations.
Their 12 reports on the matter barely extended beyond official pronouncements
announcing the introduction of new electoral rules, the sitting
of the nomination courts, the dates of accreditation of observers
and journalists and the arrival date of the Pan African Parliamentary
(PAP) observer mission. Consequently, they did not assess the adequacy
of ZEC's measures to ensure a free and fair plebiscite.
For example, the official
dailies (29/5) and Radio Zimbabwe (29/5, 8pm) simply reported that
ZEC had gazetted new election regulations meant to "speed
up the release of results" of the presidential election run-off"
by ensuring that the "V11 and V23" forms will now be
signed by the presiding and ward election officers in the presence
of candidates or their election agents without any clarification.
Only the private media
assessed ZEC's independence and poll preparations, which they
argued remained heavily compromised by inadequate funding and political
interference.
The Zimbabwe Times (26/5),
for example, reported ZEC as having filed an urgent High Court application
to destroy ballot papers used in the March polls so that the commission
can re-use the ballot boxes in the run-off citing lack of money
to buy new ballot boxes. The publication highlighted that in terms
of the Electoral Act ballot papers should not be destroyed for six
months after an election. It also reported that the MDC had opposed
ZEC's application, arguing that if it was granted this would
be "tantamount to destroying critical evidence needed in challenging
the election results".
In another report,
The Zimbabwe Independent (30/5) revealed that the police had been
instructed to manage the "whole voting process" during
the run-off, a development in which it quoted unnamed analysts saying
"was likely to compromise not only the independence of ZEC
by usurping its role, but also the fairness of the election".
Figs 1 and 2
show the sourcing patterns in the official and private media.
Fig
1: Voice distribution on ZBC
| Govt |
ZANU PF
|
ZEC |
Alternative |
War Veterans |
Farmers |
ZRP |
Unnamed |
8 |
50 |
2 |
4 |
1 |
5 |
5 |
1 |
Fig
2: Voice distribution in the private papers
| Govt |
ZANU PF |
MDC |
Other Parties |
Alt |
War Vets |
Foreign
Diplomats |
ZRP |
ZDF |
Ordinary |
Unnamed |
4 |
9 |
14 |
1 |
43 |
1 |
6 |
1 |
1 |
12 |
3 |
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