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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Government media intent on keeping Zimbabweans in the dark on talks
Extracted from Media Update 24/2008
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
August 24, 2008
The government
media continued to take advantage of the secrecy surrounding the
SADC-led power-sharing talks between ZANU PF and the two MDC formations
to cloud fundamental governance issues relating to the dialogue.
For example, there were hardly any useful updates on the fate of
the power-sharing deal, especially in light of President Mugabe's
decision to convene parliament in the middle of the talks, in violation
of the Memorandum of Understanding signed by the negotiators.
Neither did the official media query the current conflicting role
of South African President and chief mediator in the talks, Thabo
Mbeki, whose recent appointment as SADC chair effectively made him
supervisor of his mediation. Instead, these media presented a distorted
version of the progress of the negotiations, reportedly deadlocked
over the roles and powers of Mugabe and MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai
in an envisaged coalition government.
Moreover, the government media never bothered to question SADC leaders'
seemingly tacit approval of Mugabe's claims to legitimacy
by giving him the signal to convene Parliament, including parading
him as head of state when his authority was still a subject of arbitration.
Radio Zimbabwe (21/8, 6am), merely cited ruling party deputy information
secretary Ephraim Masawi noting that the regional body had "recognized
the outcome of June 27 election" and that Mugabe was "legally
elected". However, the station did not reconcile SADC's
alleged endorsement of Mugabe as president to the regional body's
criticism of his controversial re-election. Earlier, The Herald
(19/8) emphasized Tsvangirai's alleged pressure from the SADC
leaders to sign the proposed settlement, projecting his steadfast
refusal to do so as unreasonable without coherent substantiation.
It noted reports from "insiders privy to the discussions"
as "indicating that Tsvangirai was demanding executive powers
to hire and fire ministers and to chair cabinet in any new government".
No elaboration
of this was made except for quoting the alleged insiders claiming
that leaders of the minority MDC faction, Arthur Mutambara and Welshman
Ncube, had "vigorously opposed" Tsvangirai's demands
at the summit. Reportedly, they contested that "the will of
the people" in the elections reflected a power sharing arrangement
among the parties not a "transfer of power to Tsvangirai".
No comment was sought from Tsvangirai.
It was against this background that these media approvingly reported
officials announcing preparations for the opening of Parliament,
passively justifying this on SADC's recommendations that it
"may be necessary to convene Parliament to give effect to
the will of the people as expressed in the Parliamentary elections
held on March 29" (ZBC [20/8, 8pm] and The Herald [21/8])
Further, ZBC (20/8pm) quoted selected members of the public endorsing
the decision and calling upon new legislators to "deliberate
on key issues that will spur the economy to recovery" while
The Herald (21/8) cited war veterans' leader Jabulani Sibanda
urging Mugabe to "appoint the next cabinet".
Otherwise the government media simply intensified their onslaught
on Tsvangirai by narrowly presenting him as a stumbling block to
the signing of the agreement, which ZANU PF and the smaller MDC
formation led by Mutambara have already endorsed. For example, The
Herald's Manheru column [23/8] misleadingly presented ZANU
PF's participation in the talks as solely motivated by its
"magnanimous gesture" that should never indicate "self-doubt
with the mandate given it, or the process yielding it" while
maliciously depicting the MDC leader's reluctance to sign
the deal as unpatriotic and underpinned by his Western puppetry.
The Herald stories Just
whose tune is Tsvangirai singing (19/8); "Why Zimbabweans
feel betrayed (20/8); and Is Tsvangirai's signature so special?
(23/8) reflected this perception so did their cartoons.
Only the private media
critically examined these developments in their 103 reports on the
topic. They lamented the secrecy surrounding the talks, which they
argued would have allowed the public to judge for themselves the
alleged vacillation of Tsvangirai regarding the signing of the deal.
The private
media viewed the convening of Parliament as a negative development
in the country as it violated the spirit of the dialogue. They also
interpreted the development as evidence that Mugabe was losing patience
with MDC (Tsvangirai) over its reluctance to sign the agreement
and noted conflicting statements by the opposition regarding its
position on the matter. For example, Studio 7, The Zimbabwe Times
and ZimOnline (20/8) quoted the party's secretary general
Tendai Biti arguing the opening of Parliament was "a clear
repudiation" of the MoU
and could "decapitate the dialogue" while his boss,
Tsvangirai, had earlier on told ZimOnline (19/8) his party had "no
problem" with the development saying: "Let Parliament
reconvene".
The private media also
assessed the implications of an MDC dominated parliament, saying
it would constrict the presidential powers by refusing to endorse
government plans on important national issues like passing of budget
since ZANU PF had lost its two-thirds majority. The Financial Gazette
(21/8) predicted a "tug-of-war between parliament and government"
arguing that it was "likely to delay economic reforms and
bring the decade-long political crisis to a head".
In addition, they continued
to highlight the reasons why the talks were deadlocked, blaming
Mugabe for refusing to make significant concessions to Tsvangirai.
ZimOnline and SW Radio Africa (22/8) reported the ZANU PF's
supreme decision making body, Politburo, as having resolved "not
to give in to Tsvangirai's demands" and "give
him up to Monday to sign" failure of which it would implement
Plan B, which it did not disclose. Earlier, Madhuku told SW Radio
Africa (18/8) that it was "obvious" that Mugabe was
not going to make further concessions to Tsvangirai and that SADC
was not likely to "force" him to do so.
At the weekend, The Standard
(24/8) gave insight into why Tsvangirai had refused to sign the
deal. Citing leaked documents detailing some aspects of deal, the
paper alleged that the proposed 50-50 power sharing arrangement
was "clearly in favour of Mugabe who would remain Commander-in-Chief
of the Armed Forces and head of government as well as head of state".
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