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Economic
crisis throws Zimbabwe into "information dark age"
Jan Raath, Monsters
and Critics
October 07, 2008
View article on the Monsters and Critics
website
Zimbabwe's economic
catastrophe is plunging the country into an 'information dark age'
as newspapers, radio and television become overwhelmed by multi-million
per cent inflation and the breakdown of infrastructure, according
to media analysts.
Newspapers have
become too expensive for all but a tiny minority, while the state-controlled
radio and television monopoly services are stricken by chronic power
cuts, says the independent Media
Monitoring Project of Zimbabwe (MMPZ).
Zimbabwe is classified
by the New York-based international Committee to Protect Journalists
as among the 10 worst countries for hostility to freedom of the
media.
An armory of repressive
laws introduced in 2002 by President Robert Mugabe's regime prescribe
sentences for 'crimes' such as working as a journalist without accreditation
from the state-run media commission and publication of information
'likely to bring the government into disrepute.'
MMPZ coordinator Andrew
Moyse says the country's media landscape is already dominated by
government mouthpieces providing 'biased and selective coverage,
even during this important period in the country's history,' referring
to a stalled power-sharing agreement between the country's 84-year-old
autocratic president and prime minister-designate Morgan Tsvangirai.
'Now it's becoming clear
that the nation has been plunged into an even more intense and suffocating
information dark age, where reliable information is at a premium
and the main means of communicating news is rapidly reverting to
word of mouth, or SMS,' he said.
Under Mugabe's reckless
management, the country has plummeted in the last eight years from
one of Africa's most prosperous nation to a land scarred by chronic
food shortages, hyperinflation and a nearly worthless currency.
The state-controlled
and subsidized Herald newspaper, the only national daily, soared
to 3,000 Zimbabwe dollars on Saturday from 10 Zimbabwe dollars on
August 1, when the central bank slashed 10 zeroes off the currency.
For that price, a hungry Zimbabwean can get two loaves of bread.
One US dollar was trading for about 4,500 Zimbabwe dollars on Sunday.
'In any other country,
a newspaper is probably the cheapest item of people's daily expenditure,'
said Moyse. 'Here, who is going to sacrifice a loaf of bread to
read the Herald?'
The country's independent
newspapers, which receive no subsidies, the Zimbabwe Independent,
the Sunday Standard and the Financial Gazette, now cost 4,500 Zimbabwe
dollars - taking them 'into the luxury items bracket.'
The regime has blocked
the emergence of any independent electronic media, while state radio
and television maintain a relentless barrage of hostility against
Mugabe's opponents.
Even the public broadcaster
is feeling the heat of the economic meltdown. In April, it admitted
it was covering only 45 per cent of the country, because of antiquated
and run-down transmission equipment.
Earlier this year, the
government-owned transmitter company said it needed 45 million US
dollars to upgrade its equipment. The government stumped up 500,
000 US dollars which, according to state media, was promptly stolen
by a government official.
Whatever the source -
whether the official media, foreign-based private radio stations,
online news agencies or e-mail, news is becoming increasingly elusive,
as a result of ever-more frequent and severe power cuts, said Moyse.
'Only those lucky enough
to own their own generators - depending on the availability of fuel
- have access to information on a fairly regular basis.'
Rural people with no
access to electricity are becoming totally cut off from as cheap
radios disappear from shops and battery prices soar.
Earlier this year, Ray
Kaukonde, Mugabe's former governor of one of the country's largest
provinces in the north-east, compounded the isolation by ordering
that shortwave radios be seized to stop people listening to private
radio stations broadcasting from outside the country.
'It's a basic truth that
where communication is suffocated, rumour and speculation abound,'
said Moyse. 'The authorities complain bitterly about this grievous
state of affairs, yet it is entirely of their own making.'
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