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Veteran
reporter outlines challenges of reporting from Zimbabwe
Stephen Kaufman,
United States Information Service
April 09, 2009
http://www.america.gov/st/democracy-english/2009/April/20090408160046esnamfuak0.8720209.html?CP.rss=true
Reporting from political
hot spots is not a glamorous job, veteran journalist Peta Thornycroft
warns. To be successful, you need a logical and methodical way of
working, including meticulous planning for transportation, shelter
and even having "cover stories" if you are questioned
by those who do not support press freedom.
Thornycroft,
who covered South Africa's violent transition from apartheid
in the early 1990s and gave up her British citizenship in 2002 so
she could continue reporting from Zimbabwe, takes risks and endures
hazardous living situations, including detention by Zimbabwean police
in March 2002. In 2007, she was honored by the International Women's
Media Foundation with its lifetime
achievement award.
America.gov asked why,
after more than 35 years as a journalist, she continues to put herself
in danger. "I can't rush off and be an electrician or
do something else. I don't know how to do anything else,"
she joked.
In a more serious vein,
Thornycroft said she feels a commitment to report what is happening
in Zimbabwe, but calls it a "hideous assignment." She
added that she worries that her years watching patterns of repression
and despair under the rule of President Robert Mugabe and his Zimbabwe
African National Union - Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) have made
her grow "quite blunted" emotionally. She also has grown
tired of constantly living out of suitcases and hiding her identity.
"Technically, as
a freelance journalist working for yourself, it's grueling.
It's not just worrying about whether you're going to
be arrested or not being able to get comments," she said.
The
value of a low profile
Her years reporting
from places like Zimbabwe and South Africa have taught her lessons
she can pass along to others assigned to cover global hot spots.
Her first advice is to remain calm and composed while on the job,
with the goal of maintaining a low profile.
"Blend in, if possible,
without having a notebook in your hand so you don't look like
a journalist," she counsels. She advises learning the local
circumstances, culture and some of the language before the assignment—
and developing a heightened awareness of potential dangers. "One
develops a sixth sense," she says, comparing the relative
ease of veteran Zimbabwean journalists in avoiding trouble, as opposed
to newly arrived reporters who tend to "get chopped the first."
Thornycroft admits to
having become an "extremely efficient liar" when confronted
by Zimbabwean authorities or other suspicious people. Because she
is white and unknown outside of Harare, she meticulously plans her
cover stories for anyone who asks what she is doing. ""I
never, ever admit I'm a journalist," she said. She is
also very careful about where she goes. In some parts of Zimbabwe,
"I just know it would be the end of me in 10 minutes!"
She supports the idea
of journalists covering a country for no longer than three years
and then moving on because longer stays increase the risk of crossing
the line between journalism and activism. Activism not only threatens
a reporter's balance, but also can be dangerous, according
to Thornycroft, because "you will do things you would not
do if you were just involved professionally."
Thornycroft said her
experiences in Zimbabwe led her to depend on sources much more than
during her period covering South Africa's violent transition
in the early 1990s from apartheid to its first democratic election
in 1994.
More people died from
political violence during those years than during all of the rest
of the apartheid era, she said. "I could do a hard news story
every day without a contact because people were being killed in
front of my eyes," she recalled. Zimbabwe's struggle
has been measured out in a different kind of carnage. "ZANU-PF
knows that if you kill people, you get headlines in newspapers.
So . . . what they did was they beat people. They maimed them
most dreadfully," she said, with as many as 30 percent of
the more than 3,000 injured during the 2008 political violence left
with lifelong disabilities.
In its annual
report on human rights, the U.S. State Department concluded that
during 2008, along with the injured and more than 30,000 people
displaced, Mugabe's government "or its agents"
had killed more than 193 citizens in political violence and engaged
in "the pervasive and systematic abuse of human rights."
(See Zimbabwe's
Political Crisis Tied to Rights Abuses in 2008.)
Ethical
dilemmas
Thanks to her sources,
Thornycroft was able to write stories on election vote rigging and
the Mugabe regime's premeditated campaign of violence against
supporters or suspected supporters of its political opposition.
But her reliance on these sources also left her with an ethical
dilemma. Good reporters push very hard to get sources identified
"on the record" to fully identify the origins of information
in a story. But Thornycroft usually cannot reveal details that would
expose her sources' identities because doing so would put
them at risk.
"You can't
tell it all, can you? Because it may lead to them being identified,
and that is just hideous," she said. "It really dilutes
your story. But you've just got to do it."
Thornycroft said she
cannot get comments from the government to try to balance her articles.
"I phone up ZANU-PF and they hang up on me. They still do
it."
In Zimbabwe, change is
coming slowly, and Thornycroft says no one should expect Mugabe
to relinquish power without a fight. In covering the democratic
opposition, she urges younger Zimbabwean journalists not to repeat
the mistakes of those who overlooked ZANU-PF's shortcomings
in celebration of the country's 1980 independence.
"They're
going to have to realize that politicians are still politicians.
And if they were the good guys yesterday, they may not always be
the good guys, and they must keep their eyes open," she said.
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