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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Daily
Media Update 54
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
June 28, 2008
Election
Day focus
The government-controlled papers, Saturday Herald and Saturday Chronicle
(28/6) gave a sanitized picture of the voting process in the presidential
run-off election held yesterday. They claimed a "massive voter
turnout" and presented polling as having progressed smoothly
and peacefully and recording high voter turnout. They ignored reports
of voter apathy and intimidation of the electorate in many areas
by ZANU PF youths and militia reported in the private online agencies.
There was also no attempt by the papers to investigate how transparent
the actual election process was. For example, there was no mention
of whether there were polling agents from both parties represented
at each polling station, or whether there were independent observers
present too. There was also no attempt to identify the ZEC officials
manning polling stations. These are supposed to civil servants,
often school teachers. But according to private media reports, most
civil servants refused to assist after the authorities persecuted
many of ZEC's polling officers following the results of the
March elections. There was also no attempt to establish how the
vote would be verified in the absence of opposition polling agents
and independent observers.
The Herald carried no news of the polling in the three constituencies
(Gwanda South, Makokoba in Bulawayo, and Redcliff) where parliamentary
by-elections were being held at the same time. The papers also distorted
information surrounding the African Union summit in Egypt and the
comments of the opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai at a press
briefing yesterday. They carried 16 reports on electoral issues.
Election
administration
The Herald continued to make efforts to legitimize yesterday's
election by deliberately persisting with the myth that Tsvangirai
was still part of the contest. The newspaper's front-page
lead once again stressed that Mugabe was competing against Tsvangirai,
although its editorials focused on Tsvangirai's pull-out.
The Herald's comment reinforced the idea of a huge voter turn-out
by claiming that "initial reports from polling stations countrywide
indicate that this would be the biggest turnout Zimbabwe has ever
had" adding that this was a "slap in the face for detractors
who claimed this was a "Mugabe election" that did not
have the blessing of the generality of Zimbabweans."
This claim contradicted online agency reports of a low voter turnout,
at least in urban areas, and even The Herald's own story provided
evidence of voter apathy reporting polling station figures of between
75 and 400 voters. The paper also reported presiding officers saying
the turnout was lower than that recorded in the March 29 elections.
The papers made no effort to investigate online agency claims that
many people had been forced to go and vote by ZANU PF supporters
who had threatened them with violence if they didn't comply.
The government-controlled papers censored these reports. The Herald
carried pictures of busy polling stations covering half a page.
The Chronicle's main story also reported that "hordes
of people throughout the country snubbed Mr Tsvangirai and his masters
led by the country's former colonizer, Britain, by turning out to
vote". However, in the same story, the paper noted that its
own survey indicated voter apathy in Bulawayo, adding that in Matabeleland
North only Umguza had recorded a high voter turnout. The paper quoted
a Silas Muzamba attributing the low turnout to MDC officials who
allegedly went "round the wards spreading lies about the cancellation
of the elections while some threatened those who entertained hopes
of participating in the polls."
The official papers distorted statements from the MDC leader Morgan
Tsvangirai. For example, both dailies reported Tsvangirai "confirming"
that "African leaders were working with his party, Britain
and the United States to effect illegal regime change in Zimbabwe."
The papers deliberately misrepresented Tsvangirai's statements
that some African leaders were working with the MDC "towards
finding a lasting solution to the Zimbabwe crisis" to mean
illegal regime change. However, the papers did not give the full
context of Tsvangirai's Election Day comments during which
he called for an African Union-led settlement supported by SADC.
The Herald's Nathaniel Manheru also persisted with the conspiracy
theory that the British were behind Tsvangirai's election
pull-out and that it was part of a strategy to deny "Mugabe
legitimacy and recognition, thus paving the way for greater sanctions
this time with a veneer of international legitimacy".
In addition, the papers misrepresented information on the discussion
of the African Union's foreign ministers meeting ahead of
the AU heads of state summit on Monday. The Herald reported that
the African Union had resisted "attempts by some members to
blast Zimbabwe" preferring to wait for the outcome of the
presidential run-off. It only emerged at the end of the story that
representatives of Liberia, Senegal and Sierra Leone had opposed
requests that Zimbabwe's foreign affairs minister be allowed
to make a presentation that would specifically exclude any debate.
Political
violence
Apart from carrying statements from the police that Election Day
had been peaceful, The Saturday Chronicle carried one report in
which 18 MDC officials had been arrested between Thursday and yesterday
in Matabeleland North for allegedly carrying weapons "to be
used in fanning violence". The report quoted Assistant Commissioner
Edmore Veterai saying some of the MDC officials arrested were from
Harare and Zvishavane. Veterai also added his voice to claims that
MDC youths wielding weapons were intimidating some people from voting.
The papers did not question Veterai's threats when he said
"police were going to be forced to respond, 'to metal
with metal."
Fig
1: Voice distribution in the Saturday Herald and Saturday Chronicle
| ZANU PF
|
MDC |
ZEC |
Police |
Foreign
diplomats |
Alternative |
15 |
2 |
17 |
5 |
4 |
1 |
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