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Weekly Media update 2010-10
Media Monitoring Project of Zimbabwe
Monday March 15th - Sunday March 21st 2010
March 26, 2010
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Comment
Distortion
sours PM's s ZMC meeting
THE Sunday Mail (21/3)'s
heavily editorialized front-page news story of Prime Minister Morgan
Tsvangirai's meeting with members of the new Zimbabwe Media Commission
(ZMC) to ensure that it begins its work of licensing new media products
without delay, vividly exposed the negative sentiments of the newspaper's
managers to media reforms.
Instead of actually reporting
on the meeting, the story, headlined 'One step at a time Mr Prime
Minister', claimed Tsvangirai "got more than he had bargained
for" when he was allegedly "told that the registration
of other newspapers will not be a hurried process", citing
unnamed sources. In its efforts to give this unsubstantiated headline
some credibility, the paper relied on its faceless commentators
accusing Tsvangirai of violating protocol on the grounds that he
had convened the meeting before Media, Information and Publicity
Minister Webster Shamu had had the chance to meet the commission.
This so-called news story
then resorted to total editorial fiction by stating that "It
is understood . . . the MDC-T is panicking that elections are around
the corner and is desperate to have The Daily News registered",
without even bothering to attribute this absurd comment to anybody.
Instead of seeking
some informative comment from ZMC chairman, Godfrey Majonga, on
the outcome of the meeting, or even from the Prime Minister, the
paper again resorted to unidentified sources claiming that Majonga
had told Tsvangirai the commission needed to "understand their
mandate" before licensing new media products and would need
to consult the media ministry and the Attorney-General "so
that he can explain the meaning of the new law under which the commission
would be operating".
Readers of
The Sunday Mail's competition however, would have got a completely
different impression of the meeting. The Standard carried a happy
picture of the Prime Minister surrounded by beaming members of the
commission, and none other than the information minister himself,
Webster Shamu, and his deputy, Jameson Timba. The presence of the
ministry's most senior officials was completely suppressed by The
Sunday Mail. The Standard at least reported Tsvangirai advising
the commission to "ignore opponents of media reforms in the
inclusive government" who were trying to frustrate the licensing
of new media products.
The government paper's
grossly unprofessional distortion about news of this meeting involving
its own officials precisely illustrates the urgent need for more
alternative sources of credible information.
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