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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Walking
the talk: Report on gender coverage by the media during Zimbabwe's
2008 harmonized election
MISA-Zimbabwe
October 2008
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Introduction and Background
This is a report on the assessment of the manner in which the media
covered Zimbabwe's harmonized elections held on 29 March 2008.
The findings of this report are based on the conceptualization of
media as public sphere platforms through which members of the public
from across the socio-economic and political divide can democratically
access information and freely participate in political and socio-economic
debates that are central to their welfare.
The report focuses on
the period leading to these elections based on a sample of the country's
media structure that includes privately controlled and state controlled
media. The monitoring was conducted to gauge whether the Zimbabwean
media have been able to Walk the Talk in terms of gender mainstreaming
and upholding the principles of critical, balanced and objective
reportage. The report also pays attention to how the media fared
in covering electoral issues pertaining to the youth. It then makes
recommendations on how the media in Zimbabwe can be maintained as
critical and objective public sphere platforms that are acceptable
to all citizens, regardless of their gender, and if not how the
media can be transformed to play that role.
Background
and Contextual Information
Taking place against a deepening political, social and economic
crisis, the 29 March 2008 elections provided yet another spectacle
through which keen world interest was focused on Zimbabwe. Against
a background of an inflation of 800 000%, unemployment of over 80%,
a collapsed health delivery system, shortages of basic commodities,
human rights abuses, and a bout of other political and socio-economic
problems, the elections took place in an atmosphere pregnant with
eager anticipation for democratic and progressive change in the
political, social and economic spheres.
This anticipation was
against the background of a series of momentous political developments
and events. Among these was the ZANU PF annual conference in December
2007. At this conference, the ZANU PF Politburo had tabled a proposal
seeking the postponement of the 2008 presidential elections to 2010.
The conference however, rejected the proposal, setting in motion
a set of new developments that culminated in the holding of the
harmonized elections on 29 March 2008. In the mix of these developments
was the SADC initiated dialogue which brought ZANU PF and the two
MDC formations to the negotiating table to discuss possible solutions
to the Zimbabwean crisis.
The initiative came in
the wake of the events of the 11 March 2007 during which leaders
of the opposition and civic society were brutally assaulted by the
police for organizing a national day of prayer rally in Harare's
Highfield Township. Much to the dismay of the civic society, the
SADC initiated dialogue did not yield much in so far as it related
to the opening of Zimbabwe' constricted democratic space.
The passage
of the Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment (Number 18) Act through
parliament was widely condemned as a reactionary product of the
unmitigated dialogue initiative. The amendments to the Public
Order and Security Act (POSA) and the Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA) that were
effected in January 2008 did not do much in terms of paving way
for the full enjoyment of the freedoms of expression, association
and the right to access to information. While opposition political
parties were given token access to flight their advertisements with
state controlled media a few days before the March 29 elections,
editorial coverage in these media largely remained biased in ZANU
PF's favor.
With respect
to media coverage, the prevailing atmosphere of autocracy was particularly
displayed in the run-up of the presidential run-off election of
27 June 2008 when the opposition was exposed to a complete blackout
by the country's sole broadcaster, the Zimbabwe Broadcasting
Corporation (ZBC). The blackout points to a situation in which the
little coverage that was granted to the opposition in the run-up
to the March 29 elections can only be surmised as having been a
window-dressing act designed to placate the SADC electoral observer
mission team into believing that the broadcaster was sticking to
the SADC principles
and guidelines for the holding of free and fair elections.
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