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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
MDC pull out from presidential run-off election - Index of articles
Daily
Media Update 51
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
June 25, 2008
Summary
The two government dailies continued to abuse their captive market
by projecting a one-sided perspective of the decision
by MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai to withdraw from Friday's presidential
election run-off against President Mugabe.
They used their news
and opinion pages to pursue their disinformation campaign to discredit
the opposition party's decision without any due regard to balance,
fairness and accuracy.
This prostitution of
even the most basic ethical journalistic conduct in the service
of the ruling party is not a new phenomenon and also characterized
the papers' coverage of the politically motivated violence in the
country and the parties' campaign activities.
They carried four reports
on election administration issues and 11 on campaign activities.
Administrative
issues
The government dailies maintained their selective and distorted
coverage of Tsvangirai's withdrawal from the presidential run-off,
focusing exclusively on the point that the withdrawal is a legal
"nullity" while censoring alternative opinion. This only
found expression in the private and international media. The government
papers' biased coverage manifested itself in the way they continued
to censor Tsvangirai's reasons for his withdrawal. For example,
the papers have still not reported those given by Tsvangirai on
Sunday, including the reasons he provided in the letter to the Zimbabwe
Electoral Commission formally informing the authority of his withdrawal.
The Herald and Chronicle only reported ZEC chairperson George Chiweshe
and opposition party spokesman Nelson Chamisa as having confirmed
that the letter
was now with the commission.
Despite this however, the papers continued to echo official opinion
that Tsvangirai "cannot pull out" of the run-off and dressed
this up by selectively reporting an SW Radio Africa news story from
Monday reporting a similar opinion given by "opposition-aligned"
constitutional law expert Lovemore Madhuku. The papers reported
the head of the National
Constitutional Assembly civic lobby group saying Tsvangirai
was bound by law to participate in the election and that his candidature
for the run-off was strictly "not a voluntary exercise; you
give your consent when you contest the first election (in March)".
However, the papers deliberately omitted Madhuku's observation in
the same report that "politically" Tsvangirai was "right"
in withdrawing from the election, saying it was accurate to say
that the current environment was not conducive for a free and fair
poll, "but unfortunately ZANU PF would go by the legal interpretation".
The papers widely reported Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa reinforcing
this point, reiterating his earlier claims that the law left no
room for a withdrawal. They also unquestioningly amplified Chinamasa's
contention that "conditions obtaining on the ground are conducive
for the holding of free and fair elections", and helped him
to try and spread the impression that the MDC was going ahead with
its electoral preparations despite the party's withdrawal from the
poll. For example, Chinamasa claimed that MDC youths were seen yesterday
"distributing flyers in the capital urging the electorate to
vote for Tsvangirai" while "some 400 people" were
being trained as polling officers. The papers also quoted him saying
ZANU PF had been "reliably informed Tsvangirai was carrying
out his campaign work" at the Dutch Embassy where "he
fled to alleging security concerns". Said Chinamasa: " . . . he
has been moving freely in and out of the embassy to campaign and
all this contradicts the allegations he made about his safety".
The MDC was not given the right of reply.
The two dailies also censored news of a UN Security Council resolution
condemning the ongoing political violence in the country, saying
this rendered the Friday election invalid. The point was only mentioned
in an editorial in The Herald, in the context of conspiracies dismissing
the UN decision as uninformed and hypocritical. Instead, the papers'
news coverage of the matter only highlighted how the world body
had "blocked" attempts by Britain, the US and France to
"declare" Tsvangirai president of Zimbabwe on the basis
of the results of the March 29 elections. As a result, they ignored
the implications of the UN's appeal to the authorities to respect
the outcome of those elections in which Tsvangirai outpolled Mugabe.
Again, this only appeared in the private and electronic media. The
dailies denounced the alleged machinations by the three Western
countries to install Tsvangirai "illegally" and gave the
false impression that the UN had actually given Zimbabwe the go-ahead
to conduct the run-off when, in fact, the opposite was true. It
reported Zimbabwe's UN representative, Boniface Chidyausiku, saying
that submissions by South Africa and Zimbabwe "convinced"
the council that it "would be legally improper to halt the
run-off and install Tsvangirai". None of this was substantiated.
Otherwise, the remaining stories in the government press were hysterical
editorials that poured scorn on the UN censure and Tsvangirai's
decision to withdraw as well as his seeking sanctuary at the Dutch
embassy. These included Morgan's run-off boycott a joke; MDC-T:
An unmistakable stooge, and, Tsvangirai, save us the theatrics (The
Herald)
Campaigns
The Herald and Chronicle continued to portray a normal election
campaign environment ahead of Friday's run-off despite the MDC's
boycott. In their 11 stories, seven reported favourably on ZANU
PF, while the remaining four depicted the MDC as a violent party
and a puppet of the West. As usual, the government dailies reserved
the pride of their front-pages to publicising President Mugabe's
campaigns whom they passively reported railing against the MDC and
its alleged Western masters for plotting to effect "illegal"
regime change in the country. There was no attempt to explain the
logic of ZANU PF's campaign in the context of Tsvangirai's withdrawal,
or Mugabe's defence of his government's plans to continue with the
run-off on the basis that it was a legal requirement enshrined in
the Constitution.
The papers studiously avoided linking regional leaders' condemnation
of Zimbabwe's pre-election violence to Mugabe's criticism of "some
African countries" that do "not appreciate the difficulties
that Zimbabwe has gone through", pointedly noting that SADC
was "there simply as a forum for the parties to operate in".
The papers quoted him saying: " . . . those who seek to impose
themselves on us and make idiotic noises would not bother us."
The papers also showed no curiosity about Mugabe's sudden willingness
to talk with the opposition despite his party's previous hard-line
stance against the idea. They reported him telling two rallies in
Mashonaland West that "we are open to talks", saying that
"if the (opposition) have problems they can always bring them
forward, and that is how we came up with amendments to AIPPA
and POSA".
Although the
government papers reported Mugabe as having "handed over"
several pieces of farm equipment at the rallies as part of the "farm
mechanisation programme", including "12 outstanding buses
in the province", they did not query the timing of the donations.
Neither did they give an informed assessment of ZANU PF's "empowerment
programme magazine" whose content appeared to be a catalogue
of attacks against Tsvangirai and his party rather than a guide
on how the ruling party was going to empower the citizenry. The
official papers' slavishly supine reputation remained unbroken in
their coverage of threats by yet another senior defence forces officer,
Air Vice Marshal Henry Muchena. The Herald reported him pledging
to defend the country's "sovereignty and territorial integrity"
against "those that fuel and sponsor . . . regime change . . . or
purported restoration of normalcy under the guise of democracy,
rule of law, respect for property rights and good governance".
Reportedly, Muchena urged people to vote "wisely" for
President Mugabe because he "carries the values and interests"
of Zimbabwe.
Political
violence
Today, the government papers did not record any incidents of politically
motivated violence although news of state-sponsored violence against
the opposition continued to filter in from the private and international
media. The Herald and Chronicle restricted coverage of the topic
to rehashing official denials that there was systematic violence
against the opposition. For example, they quoted Foreign Affairs
Minister Simbarashe Mumbengegwi alleging that the situation in the
country was "extremely peaceful despite reports from certain
Western media saying that Zimbabwe is tumultuous", adding that
the MDC were responsible for any violence. The papers reinforced
this by quoting Chidyausiku stating that Zimbabwe's UN mission had
presented the Security Council with statistics indicating that the
opposition was mostly behind the violence. They also passively quoted
him reiterating ZANU PF's unsubstantiated claims that there have
been "numerous cases of MDC-T supporters going around dressed
in ZANU PF regalia beating up people".
Fig 1 shows
the sourcing patterns in the government dailies.
Fig
1: Voice distribution in The Herald and Chronicle
| Govt |
ZANU PF |
ZEC |
ZRP |
ZDF |
Foreign
diplomats |
Lawyers |
6 |
5 |
2 |
2 |
1 |
2 |
1 |
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