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MISA-Zimbabwe
statement on attacks by state-controlled broadcaster
MISA-Zimbabwe
November 25, 2009
MISA-Zimbabwe
takes this opportunity to set the record straight following unwarranted
attacks by Zimbabwe Broadcasting Holdings (ZBH) Chief Executive
Officer Happison Muchechetere accusing the media and freedom of
expression lobby and advocacy group of hostility and double standards
against the state-controlled broadcaster.
The ZBH chief
executive was quoted extensively in ZBH news bulletins this week
lambasting a report on the state of public broadcasting in Zimbabwe
produced by the Open Society Institute Network Publication. In its
criticism, ZBH erroneously credits MISA-Zimbabwe for publication
of the report in question. Muchechetere further attacks MISA-Zimbabwe
for allegedly dividing the nation yet according to him, the organisation
does not represent anyone in the media industry.
For the record,
MISA-Zimbabwe is a membership driven organisation comprising freelance
journalists and those working for both the private and public media
as well media institutions that subscribe to its mission and vision.
As for the report
titled: Public Broadcasting in Africa Series: Zimbabwe, it clearly
and unambiguously states that it was published by OSISA and that
the survey on Zimbabwe was conducted by the Africa Governance Monitoring
and Advocacy Project (AfriMaP), OSISA and Open Society Institute
Media Programme (OSIMP).
While MISA-Zimbabwe
holds no brief for OSISA, we, however, are unapologetic in the role
we played in facilitating the preceding roundtable discussions that
were held in Harare on 30 September 2009 to discuss the content
of the draft report to which key stakeholders including ZBH were
invited to participate and input into the document in question.
Muchechetere
was invited to the meeting in question but did not attend for reasons
best known to him nor did he see it fit to send representatives
from ZBH. The roundtable discussion offered immense opportunity
for ZBH to input into the draft document which was also made available
to the Ministry of Media, Information and Publicity for their consideration.
The ministry, through which the government controls ZBH, was duly
informed of the roundtable discussions and gave its green-light
upon being presented with the invitation letter and draft report.
The roundtable
discussions were held subsequent to the official launch of the final
report in Harare on 18 November 2009 to which the ZBH was yet again
invited through its CEO. While Muchechetere speaks of ZBH's
unbiased coverage, the CEO and ZBH news cameras were ironically
and conspicuously absent from this event at which the Prime Minister
Morgan Tsvangirai was the guest speaker.
MISA-Zimbabwe
works in the context of the Windhoek Declaration of 1991 in its
lobby and advocacy work which among its five guiding programme areas
includes the campaign for broadcasting diversity in Zimbabwe. The
campaigns also focus on the need for the transformation of ZBH into
a truly independent public service broadcaster as espoused under
the African Charter on Broadcasting.
The African
Charter on Broadcasting stipulates the need for a three-tier system
of broadcasting comprising public, private and community broadcasting.
The Charter demands that all state and government controlled broadcasters
should be transformed into public service broadcasters that respect
freedom of expression, diversity and the free flow of information
and ideas.
Among its other
provisions and principles, the Charter states:
- Upon being
transformed into truly independent broadcasters, public service
broadcasters should be accountable to all strata of the people
as represented by an independent board.
- Public service
broadcasters should serve the overall public interest avoiding
one-sided reporting and programming in regard to religion, political
beliefs, culture, race and gender.
- Editorial
independence of public service broadcasters should be guaranteed.
- Public service
broadcasters should like broadcasting and telecommunications regulation
be guaranteed by bodies which are protected against interference.
It is in the
public domain that ZBH has not been equal to the challenges and
principles of a truly independent public service broadcaster. Several
adverse parliamentary reports on the state of public broadcasting
in Zimbabwe testify to that glaring deficiency on the part of the
state-controlled broadcaster. The OSISA report merely adds weight
to similar adverse reports produced by the Parliament of Zimbabwe
and other key media stakeholders since independence in 1980.
The OSISA report
aside, independent research has also been conducted by MISA-Zimbabwe
- the reports and findings of which have equally, freely,
openly and publicly been submitted to parliament and the relevant
ministry long before the OSISA report came on stream.
Suffice to say
Muchechetere's diversionary sentiments and assertions on the
core and critical issue at hand does not and will not detract MISA-Zimbabwe
from working with the bountiful of like minds among Zimbabwean readers
and viewers to lobby and push for the transformation of ZBH into
a truly independent public service broadacaster.
Visit
the MISA-Zimbabwe fact
sheet
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