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Weekly
Media Update 2009-21
Monday May 25th 2009 - Sunday May 31st 2009
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
June 05, 2009
General
Comment
MMPZ condemns the attempt by the Zimbabwe Election Commission (ZEC)
to present an entirely distorted perspective of the repressive media
and political environment that prevailed during last year's
elections. In its December 2008 report on the media's coverage
of the elections presented to Parliament on May 13 this year, ZEC
also ignored the government media's complete disregard for
the Commission's own regulations regarding media coverage
of elections and their disdain for professional journalistic standards
as reflected in their coverage of the polls.
ZEC presented an wholly
dishonest perspective of Zimbabwe's media environment by suggesting
that the country's electorate had access to "diverse"
news outlets as reflected by the fact that there were more than
"85 registered and operating newspapers and magazines"
at the time of the elections.
It claimed:
"This plurality . . . entailed diverse opinions finding space
through the various media outlets operating in the country".
Nothing could be further from the truth! It named some of these
outlets as being magazines such as the New Farmer, Trends and The
Zimbabwe Travel. But it is a fact that these are mainly trade and
leisure publications with insignificant circulation figures -
if indeed they were published at all - that also never cover
hard news, and especially never carry any useful or contemporary
information relating to elections. This utterly deceitful effort
by ZEC to claim such outlets contributed to providing the "diversity
of opinions" it refers to in its report represents a shamefully
crude attempt to distort the truth about the country's blighted
newspaper market, which is overwhelmingly dominated by five titles
under the government-controlled Zimpapers stable. These comprise
two dailies (The Herald, Chronicle), which enjoy a national monopoly
of the daily print market following the banning of the country's
most popular daily in 2003, and three weekly papers.
According to MMPZ's monitoring of these papers during last
year's election campaigns, they tore up their public service
mandate by slavishly campaigning for ZANU PF and maligning the party's
main political opponents, the MDC, making them accomplices in the
subversion of Zimbabwe's democratic environment.
While the ZEC report
did refer to the aggressive nature of the material appearing in
the government-controlled papers citing The Herald as being "hard-hitting
on the opposition", it pretended to suggest this happened
in a media environment where "diverse opinions" proliferated
instead of the suffocating government monopolies of the domestic
daily print and broadcasting markets created by the country's
repressive media laws.
The report also only
made a contrite reference to The Herald's primary role in
propagating the proliferation of offensive and inflammatory messages
that characterized the government print media output by stating
that the paper "refrained, just marginally, from hate speech"
and only "occasionally" referred to MDC-T supporters
and officials as "thugs, puppets and sell-outs".
MMPZ's own findings
however, clearly exposes this attempt to exonerate the government
media's culpability in propagating such inflammatory, abusive
and intimidating language as downright fraudulent. The government
print media particularly allowed themselves to be used as messengers
of hatred and intolerance expressed by ZANU PF loyalists, and instead
of condemning the offending statements, endorsed and amplified them
in their news pages.
ZEC also ignored
the national broadcaster's total monopoly of all domestic
television and radio broadcasting. Despite ZBC's overwhelming
support for ZANU PF during the polls, the Commission dishonestly
claimed the broadcaster generally "complied" with its
regulations on reporting elections during the March 2008 harmonised
elections and made a "commendable effort" to "have
panellists from the two contesting political parties . . . participate
in discussion programmes" ahead of the June presidential run-off.
It is public knowledge that there was no semblance of balance on
ZBC ahead of the June elections as the broadcaster swamped its audiences
with ZANU PF propaganda in its news bulletins and current affairs
programmes. In the rare cases where the MDC-T was featured, ZBC
moderators and pro-ZANU PF panellists ganged up against it rendering
its contributions meaningless. Sadly, the media have allowed this
extraordinary ZEC deceit to pass without robust scrutiny.
The
Public and Private Press
The Press remained engrossed in the drawn-out disagreements in the
coalition government over a holistic settlement of outstanding issues
under the Global
Political Agreement (GPA), which have severely blunted its political
and socio-economic reform agenda. (See Fig 1.)
Fig 1:
Topical issues in the print media
| Publication |
Inclusive
government |
Socio-economic
issues |
Party
politics |
Human
rights abuses |
| The Herald
|
23 |
42 |
4 |
4 |
| Chronicle
|
17 |
15 |
3 |
1 |
| The Manica
Post |
3 |
7 |
0 |
2 |
| The Sunday
Mail |
4 |
11 |
0 |
0 |
| Sunday
News |
4 |
5 |
1 |
0 |
| The Financial
Gazette |
3 |
3 |
2 |
1 |
| The Zimbabwean
|
9 |
8 |
1 |
9 |
| Zimbabwe
Independent |
9 |
9 |
1 |
5 |
| The Standard
|
3 |
4 |
0 |
5 |
| Zimbabwean
On Sunday |
13 |
11 |
1 |
4 |
| Total |
88 |
115 |
13 |
31 |
However, the
government papers deliberately confused the situation on the ground
by adopting a wholly biased approach in which they only marketed
ZANU PF's perspective of the GPA while trivializing that of
the MDC and independent observers. Accordingly, they defended ZANU
PF's violations of the GPA, particularly its vehement refusal
to reverse the unilateral appointments of RBZ governor Gideon Gono
and Attorney-General Johannes Tomana.
The Herald and Chronicle (26 & 27/5), for example, merely reported
on a chorus of ZANU PF voices comprising President Mugabe, the party's
senior officials and affiliate organisations, such as the war veterans,
and Air Vice-Marshall Henry Muchena, defending Gono's appointment
without reporting it as an affront to the power-sharing deal. Neither
did they question ZANU PF's reasons for keeping Gono on as
governor nor publicised the MDC's indignant reaction.
For example, The Herald (27/5) passively quoted Muchena warning
against Gono's removal, saying the Zimbabwe Defence Forces
"were solidly behind" the RBZ governor. It quoted him:
"Tokumbirisa mapoliticians . . . regai maState institutions
tiite basa. Pamunenge muchiita basa renyu hatipindire wani . . . Mukada
kuti paradzanisa (naGono) tinozokurambirai isu tisingafanire kukurambirai.
(We beg of you politicians . . . let state institutions do their
jobs. We do not interfere in your jobs. If you meddle in ours we
might be forced to resist, something we are not supposed to do.)"'
The papers also resorted to conspiracy theories in which they simply
amplified ZANU PF's claims that agitation for the dismissal
of Gono and Tomana were at the behest of the West in its relentless
bid to illegally remove ZANU PF from power. The Sunday Mail (31/5),
for example, carried a conspiracy story that widely quoted Gono
alleging that the US and MDC had tried to induce him and "four"
other ZANU PF officials with bribes of up to US$10,5m for them to
leave office. No evidence was provided, nor were the MDC and the
US given the right of reply.
Consequently, no correlation was made of ZANU PF's violations
of the GPA with the international community's continued reluctance
to offer the new government budget funding until real political
reforms had been achieved. Instead, they presented the West's
targeted sanctions against ZANU PF's ruling elite and its
cronies as the sole impediment to the effectiveness of the coalition.
They carried 29 reports that gave this impression.
The official Press also published six stories, five of which were
editorials, criticizing the West for being divisive by channelling
reconstruction aid through the MDC-run ministries and boosting their
political fortunes at the expense of ZANU PF. They did not seek
balanced explanations for this.
Paradoxically, the government papers continued to give a twin portrayal
of a recovering economy despite its illegal sanctions mantra. They
cited Norway's provision of a US$ 10million rescue package
to help revamp the health and education sectors, the EU's
announcement that it was impressed with the country's economic
progress, and COMESA's decision to hold its summit in Zimbabwe
as evidence of the international community's growing confidence
in the government's reconstruction programmes.
The papers carried five stories on human rights violations. They
were mostly updates on court cases involving civil society and MDC
activists accused of inciting public violence. One of these was
on the acquittal of MDC-T Constitutional and Parliamentary Affairs
Minister Eric Matinenga on similar charges, which The Herald (28/5)
buried on its second page, contrary to the prominence the official
Press gave to his arrest.
Only the private
papers gave space to the MDC-T's concerns over ZANU PF's
reluctance to fully implement the GPA and highlighted the negative
effects of such intransigence on the inclusive government. Although
they admitted to growing Western interest in the country's
reconstruction, they viewed Mugabe's refusal to reverse the
controversial appointments of Gono and Tomana and the slow progress
in instituting democratic reforms as militating against this. The
papers also criticized the security chiefs for interfering in the
country's political affairs by defending ZANU PF in its dispute
with the MDC over Gono's appointment.
The Zimbabwe Independent (29/5), for instance, argued that the service
chief's stance vindicated concerns that they were partisan
and unprofessional. It asserted that it was "unheard of in
most democracies . . . for the security forces to make their opinions
public on political disputes".
The private papers carried eight reports on rights violations. Most
of these were on the acquittal of Matinenga.
Fig
2: Voice distribution in the Press
| Publication
|
Govt |
ZANU
PF-Min |
MDC-T
Min |
MDC-M
Min |
Bus |
Alt |
Foreign
diplomats |
| The Herald |
6 |
16 |
19 |
5 |
9 |
5 |
10 |
| Chronicle
|
2 |
5 |
12 |
14 |
0 |
6 |
5 |
| The Manica
Post |
2 |
0 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
0 |
0 |
| The Sunday
Mail |
2 |
3 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
| Sunday
News |
3 |
2 |
2 |
0 |
4 |
1 |
4 |
| The Financial
Gazette |
1 |
1 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
9 |
9 |
| The Zimbabwean
|
1 |
0 |
2 |
0 |
1 |
14 |
2 |
| Zimbabwe
Independent |
1 |
0 |
6 |
3 |
0 |
3 |
0 |
| The Standard
|
0 |
0 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
2 |
0 |
| Zimbabwean
On Sunday |
2 |
0 |
3 |
0 |
1 |
9 |
8 |
ZBC
and private radio stations
The row between ZANU PF and the MDC over the positions of Reserve
Bank Governor Gideon Gono and Attorney-General Johannes Tomana and
its implications on the coalition government's efforts to
revive the economy dominated the broadcast media. See Fig 3.
Fig 3:
Topical issues on ZBC and private stations
| Station
|
Inclusive
government |
Socio-economic
issues |
Human
rights abuses |
| ZTV |
13 |
10 |
1 |
| Spot FM
|
15 |
10 |
1 |
| Radio Zimbabwe
|
18 |
9 |
1 |
| SW Radio
Africa |
11 |
6 |
3 |
| Studio
7 |
8 |
3 |
3 |
| Total
|
65 |
38 |
9 |
However, ZBC
suffocated the reasons behind the MDC-T's disapproval of President
Mugabe's unilateral appointment of the two officials with
reports that defended the decision while depicting those against
it as agents of Western imperialism and an illegal regime change
plot.
ZBC (25/5, main bulletins), for example, passively quoted Mugabe
reiterating that he would not rescind the appointments because they
were done according to the law, arguing that those who called for
Gono's removal were "wasting their time" because
he "played a crucial role in fighting illegal sanctions".
The broadcaster allowed this to pass without noting that the governor's
appointment violated the Global Political Agreement (GPA). Neither
did it question the plausibility of retaining Gono given his widely
criticized quasi-fiscal policies, believed to have contributed to
Zimbabwe's economic collapse, and the donors' demands
for his removal as a precondition for aid.
Instead, the next day ZBC (8pm) passively quoted Air Vice-Marshall
Henry Muchena, war veterans and some church leaders rallying behind
Gono, portraying calls for his removal as aimed at destabilizing
the inclusive government.
The MDC-T was never allowed to express its concerns. The broadcaster
also declined to view the dispute as another sign of deepening policy
conflicts and power struggles within the coalition. It was against
this background that ZBC censored Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's
concerns over ZANU PF's reluctance to fully implement the
GPA while addressing his party's ninth annual conference.
It mainly focused on the election of some senior party officials.
Otherwise, the rest of ZBC's stories on the inclusive government
portrayed it as a success, citing as evidence the continued pledges
of financial assistance by some regional and Western countries.
The broadcaster's coverage of the country's socio-economic
troubles was equally unhelpful. For instance, it celebrated the
decline in the rate of inflation and the availability of basic commodities
as indicative of government's success while avoiding interpreting
persisting poor service delivery, infrastructural decay and labour
unrest as evidence of the authorities' ineffective interventions.
The private
radio stations were more analytical. They condemned Mugabe's
refusal to annul his appointment of Gono and Tomana saying it exposed
his disdain for the GPA. They quoted commentators contending that
Mugabe's stance and threats by war veterans' leader
Joseph Chinotimba to unleash violence on farms if Gono was removed,
would cripple government's efforts to renew the economy, which
depended on the full implementation of the political pact.
The stations also reported the country's socio-economic situation
as still precarious, more than 100 days after the government's
inauguration. As examples, they cited food deficits in some provinces,
persisting poor service delivery and the humanitarian crisis bedeviling
the country's prisons.
Their eight stories on human rights abuses were also reported in
the context of highlighting government's failure to fully
implement the GPA. Of these, three new incidents stemmed from the
alleged abduction of a pastor in Harare by suspected state security
agents for assisting victims of last year's electoral violence;
the arrest of a white commercial farmer in Mutare and the alleged
assault of another one in Chegutu by suspected ZANU PF supporters.
The rest were follow-ups.
Fig
4: Voice distribution on ZBC and private radios
| Station |
Govt |
ZANU
PF-Min |
MDC-T
Min |
MDC-M
Min |
Bus |
Alt |
Foreign
diplomats |
| ZTV |
2 |
12 |
9 |
4 |
3 |
0 |
6 |
| Spot FM
|
0 |
2 |
6 |
3 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
| Radio Zimbabwe
|
5 |
4 |
9 |
3 |
0 |
0 |
2 |
| SW Radio
Africa |
0 |
0 |
10 |
1 |
|
6 |
2 |
| Studio
7 |
0 |
1 |
3 |
0 |
0 |
12 |
0 |
Online
Publications
The private online agencies also focused on the deepening conflict
over Gono and Tomana's appointments, which, they noted, distracted
government from tackling the country's socio-economic problems.
Fig
5: Topical stories on online news agencies
| Agency |
Inclusive
government |
Socio-economic
decay |
Human
rights violations |
| ZimOnline
|
7 |
3 |
9 |
| The Zimbabwe
Times |
8 |
2 |
7 |
| New Zimbabwe.com
|
5 |
3 |
4 |
| Zimdaily
|
2 |
2 |
2 |
| Total |
22 |
10 |
11 |
However, while
the agencies reported several commentators agreeing with the MDC-T's
calls for the speedy resolution of outstanding issues, such as the
removal of Gono, The Zimbabwe Times (31/5) cited economist Eric
Bloch arguing that the embattled governor "should be allowed
to continue to lead the RBZ" because "he is a genius".
The agencies also noted that while the government had registered
some success on the economic front as acknowledged by the MDC-T
and some Western countries, there was still need for comprehensive
political reforms.
Their three stories on rights violations were similar to those carried
by the private radios.
Fig 6:
Online agencies - Voice distribution
| Agency
|
ZANU PF-Min
|
MDC-T Min
|
MDC-M Min
|
Alt |
Lawyers |
Foreign
diplomats |
| ZimOnline
|
1 |
4 |
0 |
1 |
6 |
2 |
| The Zimbabwe
Times |
0 |
7 |
1 |
3 |
7 |
0 |
| New Zimbabwe.com
|
1 |
4 |
0 |
5 |
2 |
0 |
| Zimdaily
|
1 |
3 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
1 |
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