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Weekly
Media Update 2009-24
Monday June 15th - Sunday June 21st 2009
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
July 26, 2009
General
Comment
The Sunday Mail (21/6) provided fresh evidence of the residual paranoia
prevailing within government over the free flow of information that
threatens to undermine the MDC's repeated promises to reform
the media as envisaged in the Global
Political Agreement.
The government-controlled
weekly reported "highly placed government sources" telling
the paper that the publication by the Prime Minister's Office
during the week of a four-page tabloid newsletter reporting on the
events of Morgan Tsvangirai's tour of the US and Europe had
undermined Cabinet and threatened to provoke a clash between the
two institutions.
The "sources"
implied that the newsletter had broken the "Oath of Secrecy"
because Tsvangirai had been "sent by Cabinet" on his
mission and the newsletter contained details of his trip before
he had briefed Cabinet about them.
In what was
evidently a story designed to discredit the publication and encourage
the threatened conflict, The Sunday Mail lied about the newsletter's
40,000 print-run by inflating it tenfold and then resorted to quoting
an unnamed Midlands State University media studies lecturer commenting
on its status with regard to the notorious Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act. Under AIPPA newsletters
were exempt from registration, but the lecturer was quoted saying
" . . . by printing 400,000 copies . . . it is clear this
is an organ of mass communication." This implied the newsletter
needed to be registered under the law. But the paper made no effort
to remind its readers that a recent High Court ruling declared that
the Media and Information Commission set up under AIPPA as the registering
authority, had been rendered a legal nullity following amendments
made to the law in 2007.
The paper also allowed
its "highly placed sources" to dishonestly suggest that
the locally produced newsletter had betrayed information about Tsvangirai's
tour to "American printers" before Cabinet had been
briefed because "We are told USAID was involved in this publication."
George Charamba, the
Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Media, Information and Publicity,
was only quoted adding a sinister context to the story: "We
have seen the publication . . . noted its circulation figures and
we are looking at what the law says."
The newsletter does not
explain why the Prime Minister's Office has found it necessary
to produce its own publication, given the dominance of the existing
government-controlled Press. However, it is presumably a response
to the ongoing relentless distortion and censorship of Tsvangirai's
activities and comments that still characterize the old government
regime's media - as was so well illustrated by The Sunday
Mail's story.
But while MMPZ sympathizes
with the frustrations of trying to govern in a hostile media environment,
the Project believes the MDC should not be attempting to circumvent
these institutions by establishing parallel media structures to
disseminate its own propaganda, however well-meaning.
By doing so, it is avoiding
addressing a most urgent national responsibility.
As Geoff Nyarota, editor
of The Zimbabwe Times online newspaper, observes in his blog about
the newsletter this week:
"The major agenda
of the MDC in its unique position as a partner in government . . . should
be to dismantle the media behemoth built by Zanu-PF over the years . . .
"As a
first priority, Zimbabwe expects the MDC to dismantle AIPPA, POSA
and other restrictive legislation . . . It should seek to create
an enabling media environment, while facilitating the establishment
of truly independent media...
"A private newspaper
for Tsvangirai cannot be the democratic change that the MDC has
promised long-suffering Zimbabweans...
"What Zimbabwe
needs is a free and democratic media environment, where newspapers
and the electronic media operate within a context of genuine freedom,
where they have free access to government news sources and enjoy
the liberty to publish without let or hindrance; where journalists . . . are
not regarded as enemies of the state."
The
Public and Private Press
Prime Minister
Morgan Tsvangirai's tour of Europe and the US as part of the
fragile coalition government's efforts to persuade the West
to fund its economic revival continued to attract intense debate
in the print media. (See Fig. 1)
Fig
1: Topical news distribution in the print media
| Publication
|
Inclusive
govnt |
Socio-econ
issues |
Human
rights abuses |
| The Herald
|
26 |
23 |
2 |
| Chronicle
|
13
|
15 |
0 |
| Manica
Post |
3 |
4 |
0 |
| Sunday
Mail |
3 |
4 |
0 |
| Sunday
News |
4 |
10 |
0 |
| Financial
Gazette |
5 |
3 |
0 |
| The Zimbabwean
|
13 |
19 |
2 |
| Zimbabwe
Independent |
5 |
4 |
2 |
| The Standard
|
4 |
4 |
4 |
| The Zimbabwean
on Sunday |
7 |
5 |
7 |
| Total
|
83 |
91 |
17 |
But while the
private Press openly reported on Tsvangirai's trip and attributed
his failure to raise significant financial support to government's
superficial reforms that fell short of the Global Political Agreement
(GPA) and the West's demands, the official papers simply peddled
propaganda that completely distorted the purpose of the visit and
the reasons behind its failed outcome.
Their news reports either suffocated some of Tsvangirai's
meetings with Western leaders or selectively reported on them to
reinforce their view that while he had personally failed in his
Cabinet-given task to persuade the West to remove its alleged sanctions
on Zimbabwe, which the papers claimed were unwarranted instruments
for illegal regime change, he had used the trip to boost his party's
political fortunes.
Without granting Tsvangirai
or his party the right of reply, they then carried several opinion
pieces by commentators expanding on this propaganda.
As a result, those who
rely on these papers for their news received a distorted purpose
for Tsvangirai's visit and equally distorted reasons why his
trip had raised a pittance of the funds required to resuscitate
the economy.
Otherwise, these papers
fed their audiences with 20 articles that projected Western sanctions
on Zimbabwe as the only hindrance to government's effectiveness,
while the remaining 63 dishonestly interpreted the West's
demands for genuine democratic reforms as a precondition for aid
as simply a cover for its relentless machinations to remove ZANU
PF from power and replace it with the MDC.
From this perspective
The Herald and Chronicle (15/6), for instance, only reported on
Tsvangirai's meeting with US President Barack Obama in the
context of reporting the exclusion of ZANU-PF's Tourism Minister
Walter Mzembi from the discussions. They accused the US president
of "lacking diplomatic courtesy" and being "overtly
biased" against ZANU PF and criticized his plans to channel
US$73 million of humanitarian aid through NGOs, which they claimed
were linked to the MDC-T.
\
No evidence however, was provided to support this claim.
The Herald and
The Sunday Mail published 10 opinion pieces and editorials that
either magnified these unsubstantiated allegations, or used them
as the basis to generate conspiracy stories against the West, Zimbabwean
civil society, Tsvangirai and his party.
None of the articles acknowledged the fact that the failure by government
to resolve the outstanding appointments of two senior government
officials and fully implement other conditions of the GPA mainly
relating to the rule of law and media reforms, especially by its
ZANU PF arm, was the main source of its futile fund-raising efforts
and disunity.
This reflected the perspective
of the papers' news stories on the coalition.
For example, The Herald
(19/6) sought to project the failure by the MDC and the West to
lift sanctions and close "pirate radio stations" as
the major outstanding issues, while The Sunday Mail (21/6) suggested
that the publication of the Prime Minister's four-page newsletter
represented a new threat to government stability. But both papers
ignored Tsvangirai's statement in May that the unilateral
appointment of senior government officials remained the most important
outstanding dispute.
In the week
of a visit to Zimbabwe by the head of the human rights watchdog,
Amnesty International, both papers censored damning sections of
the organization's report on continued human rights violations
in the country and then dismissed AI's observations despite
carrying stories that affirmed some of them, such as the arrest
of WOZA activists
in Harare for holding an "illegal" demonstration and
the arrest and assault of a Herald photographer by the police for
taking pictures of the event. None of the official papers reported
these events as an indication of the persistent rights violations
still plaguing Zimbabwean society.
Their stories on the
country's socio-economic malaise were equally divorced from
government's partial implementation of the GPA.
The private Press provided
a more useful perspective of Tsvangirai's visit to the US
and Europe.
They noted that continued
assaults on media freedom, political detentions and farm invasions,
among others, underlined Western countries' skepticism over
government's willingness to reform.
These papers dismissed
official claims that sanctions were the sole hindrance to government's
effectiveness, noting that power struggles that manifested themselves
in policy contradictions and failure to resolve outstanding senior
government appointments were the main threats to government unity.
Of their 15 stories on
rights violations, four were new incidents stemming from the assault
and arrest of WOZA activists, an alleged assassination attempt on
Mashonaland Central governor Martin Dinha by unknown assailants,
and the police barring planned marches by gender activists in Harare.
Although the government
papers' appeared to give statistically equitable coverage
to ZANU PF and the MDC-T in their sourcing patterns, publicity for
the MDC-T appeared mostly in the context of vilifying the party
as an instrument of the West's illegal regime change agenda
and responsible for the sanctions allegedly crippling the country.
The 10 unnamed sources they quoted were also used in this context.
It was only
in the private Press that the party's position was fairly
articulated.
Fig
2: Voice distribution in the print media
| Publication
|
Govt |
ZANU
PF Min |
MDC-T
Min |
MDC-M
Min |
Alt |
Foreign
diplomats |
Ord
people |
Unnamed |
| The Herald
|
13 |
6 |
5 |
0 |
0 |
16 |
5 |
6 |
| Chronicle
|
3 |
3 |
5 |
3 |
4 |
8 |
2 |
1 |
| Manica
Post |
2 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
| Sunday
Mail |
1 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
3 |
2 |
| Sunday
News |
5 |
2 |
3 |
0 |
6 |
3 |
0 |
1 |
| Financial
Gazette |
2 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
1 |
0 |
| The Zimbabwean
|
0 |
1 |
5 |
0 |
4 |
4 |
8 |
0 |
| Zimbabwe
Independent |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
4 |
0 |
2 |
| The Standard
|
0 |
3 |
2 |
0 |
6 |
3 |
0 |
1 |
| The Zimbabwean
On Sunday |
2 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
5 |
5 |
1 |
3 |
ZBC
and private radio stations
The electronic
media also debated Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's visit
to the West to mobilize financial aid to tackle the country's
myriad socio-economic problems. See Fig. 3.
Fig
3: Topical issues on ZBC and private stations
| Station
|
InclusiveGovernment |
Socio-economic
issues |
Human
rights abuses |
| ZTV |
25 |
33 |
4 |
| Spot FM
|
15 |
14 |
3 |
| Radio Zimbabwe
|
13 |
7 |
6 |
| Studio
7 |
5 |
3 |
3 |
| SW Radio
Africa |
11 |
0 |
10 |
| Total
|
69 |
57 |
26 |
However, instead
of informing its audiences honestly about his First World safari
and explaining why it had yielded little results, ZBC simply attacked
the West for demanding democratic reforms before providing financial
support for government's reconstruction plans. It presented
these demands as racist and hinged on the alleged Western crusade
to overthrow ZANU PF.
Radio Zimbabwe
(18/6, 6am), for example, passively reported the ZANU PF politburo
describing as "divisive" the West's refusal to
"either lift sanctions or offer meaningful assistance to the
unity government".
The station
did not ask the party how the West's demands for GPA compliance
threatened government unity.
ZBC's
reluctance to report fairly on the West's concerns over government's
hesitant reforms resulted in ZTV (16/6, 8pm) reporting Germany's
calls for democratization, including an end to farm invasions, only
in the context of comments by ZANU PF officials masquerading as
'political analysts'. The 'analysts', Themba
Mliswa and William Mutomba, were quoted dismissing Germany's
conditions as 'racist' and an attempt to "reverse"
land reforms.
ZBC (17/6, 8pm)
also used the comments of outgoing US Ambassador James McGee that
America would maintain its sanctions on Zimbabwe until there were
real democratic reforms, to reinforce unsubstantiated claims that
Western sanctions were responsible for paralyzing government programmes.
Apart from six
reports celebrating provisions of modest financial aid by Denmark
and Norway, which it claimed was "unconditional" budgetary
support, the broadcaster's remaining stories about the Prime
Minister's tour prominently reported selective statements
Tsvangirai made glossing over the cracks in government, and especially
those which reflected positively on President Mugabe's commitment
to the coalition.
The broadcaster's
coverage of the country's socio-economic crises mirrored by
poor service delivery, dilapidated infrastructure and low productivity
was piecemeal and detached from government's economic reconstruction
programmes.
ZBC's
13 stories on human rights violations avoided examining the implications
of continued rights abuses on government's durability and
its aid mobilization efforts. One of the reports was a fresh incident
stemming from an alleged assassination attempt on Mashonaland Central
governor Martin Dinha, while the rest were based on ZANU PF government
officials' statements dismissing the existence of problems
in the country.
The private
radio stations provided a more informative insight into Tsvangirai's
trip because they provided him with a platform to explain its purpose;
carried almost daily updates on his meetings with Western leaders
and their response to his appeal for financial support.
The private
stations also quoted independent commentators noting that the prevailing
political and media repression vindicated donor countries'
skepticism.
The stations
covered the country's socio-economic crises and ongoing human
rights violations in the context of them illustrating government's
failure to comply with the terms of the GPA. They carried 13 stories
on rights violations, three of which were new incidents emanating
from the arrest of WOZA activists in Harare and Bulawayo for allegedly
holding "illegal" demonstrations; the alleged harassments
of suspected MDC supporters in rural areas by ZANU PF militia, and
the arrest of MDC-T director-general Toendepi Shonhe on perjury
charges.
The rest were
follow-ups on court cases involving civic activists and journalists
and Amnesty International's unflattering observations on the
country's "precarious" human rights situation.
Although ZBC
appeared to give space to all parties as shown in Fig 4, the MDC-T
voices were largely quoted in the context of portraying the inclusive
government as a workable arrangement.
Fig 4: Voice distribution on ZBC and private stations
| Station
|
Govt |
ZANU PF-Min |
MDC-T-Min
|
MDC-M-Min |
Business |
Alt |
Foreign
diplomats |
| ZTV |
15 |
14 |
2 |
3 |
16 |
12 |
7 |
| Spot FM
|
10 |
4 |
7 |
2 |
4 |
3 |
0 |
| Radio Zimbabwe
|
8 |
2 |
7 |
1 |
2 |
1 |
2 |
| Studio
7 |
1 |
0 |
6 |
0 |
0 |
6 |
1 |
| SW Radio
Africa |
0 |
1 |
16 |
0 |
0 |
10 |
4 |
Online
news agencies
The private online agencies also focused on Prime Minister Morgan
Tsvangirai's trip to the West. (See Fig. 5).
Fig
5: Topical stories in the online agencies
| Agency
|
Inclusive
government |
Socio-economic
decay |
Human
rights violations |
| ZimOnline
|
6 |
5 |
3 |
| Zimbabwe
Times |
12 |
2 |
7 |
| New Zimbabwe.com
|
14 |
4 |
0 |
| Zimdaily
|
4 |
1 |
0 |
| Total
|
36 |
12 |
10 |
They updated
their audiences on Tsvangirai's meetings with Western leaders
and the reasons why his trip had failed to raise substantial amounts
of aid.
They reported analysts dismissing official claims that sanctions
were the only hindrance to the coalition's progress, saying
the prolonged disputes over the appointments of Reserve Bank governor
Gideon Gono and Attorney-General Johannes Tomana, and the persistent
power struggles were, in fact, the main cause of government paralysis.
The agencies'
10 stories on rights violations were similar to those recorded by
the private stations.
Fig
6: Voice distribution on online agencies
| Agency
|
ZANU PF
Min |
MDC-T Min |
MDC-M Min
|
Alt |
Lawyers |
Foreign
diplomats |
| ZimOnline
|
0 |
4 |
0 |
3 |
2 |
6 |
| Zimbabwe
Times |
1 |
8 |
1 |
3 |
3 |
6 |
| NewZimbabwe.com
|
1 |
2 |
1 |
3 |
0 |
9 |
| Zimdaily
|
0 |
1 |
2 |
1 |
0 |
1 |
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