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Weekly
Media Update 2010-11
Monday March 22nd - Sunday March 28th 2010
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
April 01, 2010
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Free the airwaves
FEARS that the authorities are attempting to circumvent genuine
media reform were reignited with the news that ZBC is forging ahead
with plans to launch a new national television station, ZBCTV 2,
without any indication that it is attempting to reform its existing
inept and biased television "service". This so-called
"entertainment" station, which The Herald (30/3) said
briefly appeared on air on March 26th on a trial run, is an attempt
to seduce Zimbabwean viewers away from external satellite television
services that provide viewers with more professional, fair and entertaining
programming than ZTV's crude and dull diet.
But it will not satisfy
Zimbabweans' information needs. Neither will it bring diversity
to the broadcast media which is still monopolized by the ZANU PF
controlled "public" broadcaster despite a Supreme Court
ruling 10 years ago declaring its monopoly unconstitutional.
This illegal
monopoly will not be annulled by the addition of another ZBC station.
It can only be brought to an end if the government complies with
the terms of the GPA,
which calls for a "free and diverse" media, and allows
independent broadcasters onto the airwaves to give viewers, and
listeners, the opportunity to choose which radio and television
channels they tune into for their news and entertainment.
Without this
essential reform to Zimbabwe's suffocating broadcast environment,
the nation will remain a captive audience of ZBC's illegal monopoly,
and the broadcaster will never be challenged by professional competition
to reform its incompetent and tiresome output.
Most importantly of all,
no amount of new newspapers will qualify Zimbabwe's media environment
to be described as "free and diverse" while the airwaves
remain under the control of partisan political interests. The government
must truly "free the airwaves" before the nation can believe
a media environment exists that is conducive to the holding of any
credible elections.
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