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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 52
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
June 26, 2008
[The Financial
Gazette was not available on the streets or online at the time MMPZ
completed this report]
Election
focus
The government controlled-papers, The Herald and Chronicle (26/6)
continued to misreport growing regional and international concern
over the government's insistence that it would go ahead with tomorrow's
controversial presidential election run-off despite universal advice
to postpone the vote.
The papers made
no attempt to query the legitimacy of the election, or investigate
the validity of the reasons why the MDC had withdrawn
from it.
This was reflected in
all 19 reports that the papers published on electoral issues. Six
of these were on poll management, party campaigns (7), and political
violence (6).
Administrative
issues
The Herald and Chronicle either ignored or distorted mounting international
pressure on Harare to postpone Friday's run-off until the political
and electoral environment in the country was conducive for the poll.
They dishonestly attempted
to discredit Wednesday's resolution by the SADC Organ on Politics,
Defence and Security (the so-called Troika) advising the authorities
to defer the run-off, by claiming that its chair, Angola, and South
African President and mediator in the Zimbabwe crisis, Thabo Mbeki,
had "boycotted" the summit. The papers quoted an unnamed
government official "well-versed" in the operations of
SADC saying the organ's resolution had "no force" as a
result of the boycott. He said that because only the leaders of
two countries had attended the meeting, Tanzania and Swaziland,
it had been reduced to a "bilateral" exercise and that
those attending were "only expressing an obligation to the
Western world". The papers deliberately omitted the fact that
Angola had sent a presidential representative, and they continued
to censor earlier comments by the Angolan president himself, Eduardo
dos Santos, criticizing the pervasive violence of Zimbabwe's election
campaign and calling for tolerance and dialogue between the contestants.
Instead, The Herald and
Chronicle resorted to unsubstantiated conspiracy theories to undermine
SADC's authority and the region's concerns over the Zimbabwe crisis.
They achieved this by finding unnamed "political analysts"
urging SADC to "stand by Mugabe since there were concerted
efforts by Britain and America to divide the regional grouping and
give space to their regime change agenda". But no evidence
for this was provided.
The Herald and Chronicle
also continued to present preparations for the polls as proceeding
smoothly despite the MDC's withdrawal and international criticism
of the government over its intention to go ahead with the election.
They approvingly reported the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission as having
"unanimously agreed" to proceed with the election, quoting
ZEC chairman George Chiweshe saying that the decision to withdraw
by MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai had "no legal force or effect
since it was filed out of time". The papers passively reported
Chiweshe saying the electoral law stipulates the period during which
a candidate must file a withdrawal letter, but provided no clarification.
Instead, The Herald and Chronicle attempted to discredit the MDC
decision by selectively quoting analysts claiming that Tsvangirai's
withdrawal was unconstitutional. For example, they approvingly reported
constitutional law expert Lovemore Madhuku saying the MDC leader
"cannot pull out of the run-off now" because "candidature
for the run-off or second election is not a voluntary exercise;
you give your consent when you contest the first election".
Parties'
campaigns
The government Press published eight stories on party campaign activities,
all favouring ZANU PF. But these were mostly based on senior ZANU
PF officials maliciously attacking the MDC and its leader. They
repeatedly portrayed the opposition as "Western puppets"
bent on reversing the gains of independence without providing a
shred of evidence. The papers' editorials were cut from the same
cloth. The Herald's political editor Caesar Zvayi, for example,
claimed that by seeking refuge at the Dutch Embassy, Tsvangirai
had shown himself to be "a childish, shameless Western stooge".
Zvayi would have rather seen Tsvangirai seek safety at an African
embassy nearer to his home. The puerile level of this diatribe gained
in status when Zvayi resorted to insults about Tsvangirai's "potholed"
demeanour and derided him for "leaving the comfort of his wife
Susan's arms in this wintry weather to spend night(s) on a cold
couch at the Dutch Embassy, claiming he fears for his life".
Meanwhile, the news pages of the papers were dominated again by
Mugabe addressing rallies in Mashonaland Central where he warned
the West against "commenting on Zimbabwe issues because the
country is no longer under colonial rule".
Political
violence
The Herald and Chronicle continued to ignore widespread reports
in the private electronic media and the international press of the
continuing campaign of state-sponsored violence against opposition
supporters and ordinary civilians around the country. Since this
cruel and brutal assault on Zimbabwe's civilian population didn't
exist in their minds, the papers had difficulty in reporting any
of the growing chorus of regional and international outrage over
the violence. Instead, their six reports, which included three new
incidents, remained focused on exclusively blaming the MDC for the
violence. For example, the two dailies published the arrest of another
newly elected MDC-T official, the senator for Siyakobvu in Kariba,
for "masterminding" violence against ruling party supporters
in the area. Their stories unfailingly inserted their own editorial
comments accusing the MDC of "unleashing" violence throughout
the country since the March elections, "targeting" war
veterans and senior ZANU PF officials "in their quest to erase
the country's history and effect a regime change". No evidence
was provided to support these crassly fabricated claims. The same
report quoted police confirming the arrest of another MDC official
in Hurungwe for allegedly "storming ZANU PF offices in Karoi
and beating up three employees", while the Chronicle reported
that suspected MDC-T "thugs" burnt polling stations in
Zvishavane and Gweru "in a desperate attempt to discredit tomorrow's
run-off". As usual, no comment was sought from the MDC.
MMPZ notes that
the first law of a propagandist's handbook is to accuse your accusers
of the crimes you are being accused of committing - and to be even
more virulent in making the claims. Evidently, those masterminding
the propaganda war against the MDC in the government-controlled
media are well aware of this tactic - which becomes even more effective
once the police and other security agencies have been recruited
to provide "official" information to support the claims.
Once again MMPZ is obliged to point out that this strategy was effectively
employed by the media managers of Rwanda's official Radio Milles
de Collines, which played a crucial role in fanning the flames of
ethnic hatred that led to the 1994 genocide in that country. In
Zimbabwe today, the government-controlled media are clearly being
used to incite hatred and intolerance of a legitimate political
party. Those in control of Zimbabwe's official media need to be
reminded that their conduct is contributing towards creating an
environment conducive to a repetition of the Rwandan catastrophe
in Zimbabwe.
Fig 1 shows the sourcing patterns in the government dailies.
Fig 1: Voice distribution in The Herald and Chronicle
| Govt |
ZANU PF |
ZEC |
Alt |
Foreign
Diplomats |
Judiciary |
Police |
Unnamed |
4 |
4 |
3 |
2 |
8 |
7 |
4 |
5 |
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