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Weekly Media Update 2010 - 18
The Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe
Monday, May 10th - Sunday, May 16th 2010
May 21, 2010
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Comment
Dispute
exposes 'political' structure of ZMC
News of disagreements
within the new Zimbabwe Media Commission over the issue of resource
persons for a "workshop" organized to facilitate the registration
of new media operators exposes the politically compromised nature
of an organization that is supposed to be free of political influence
and bodes ill for the coalition government's media reform agenda.
While the latest news
in The Financial Gazette (20/5) reported that the commission was
expected to announce the successful applicants on the last day of
what it described as a series of "board meetings" between
May 24th and May 26th, The Standard (16/5) quoted "sources"
within the ZMC saying the commissioners were "deeply divided"
over the choice of facilitators, with commissioners aligned to ZANU
PF allegedly insisting on Media, Information and Publicity Minister
Webster Shamu, his permanent secretary George Charamba, and Attorney-General
Johannes Tomana as the resource persons. Members of the commission
who are not aligned to ZANU PF were reported to be opposed to the
involvement of officials from the ZANU PF arm of government on the
grounds that it would undermine the ZMC's independence.
To some extent this resistance
to co-opt openly partisan facilitators is encouraging, though it
remains to be seen who the ZMC eventually appoints as their "advisors".
However, such petty political disputes should not even arise in
an allegedly independent body and it will be instructive to note
if the Commission declines any application for the registration
of new media services - and if so, for what reason.
In its story reporting
that successful applicants would be announced at the end of the
Commission's deliberations next week, The Financial Gazette reported
that it too, was planning to launch its own daily, The Daily Gazette,
in addition to the expected return of The Daily News, while the
Independent group of newspapers' has also applied to have its planned
new daily, NewsDay, registered. If these new dailies are all duly
registered without delay, this can only be good news for Zimbabweans
whose choice of where they obtain news about Zimbabwe will be dramatically
increased.
However, there is complete
silence about the fate of new broadcasters. Indeed, while ZMC is
also responsible for processing applications from these aspiring
media operators, the fate of local broadcasters ultimately lies
in the hands of the Broadcasting Authority of Zimbabwe (BAZ) whose
responsibility it will be to allocate the successful applicants
the wavebands on which to broadcast. BAZ though, is itself mired
in a controversy that does not appear to be anywhere near a conclusion.
While Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai declared that its membership
was irregularly appointed after Information Minister unilaterally
announced its composition last year, there appears to have been
no attempt to resolve this dispute. Without some resolution to this
stalemate there will be no new local broadcasters and Zimbabweans,
especially those beyond the limited urban reach of the Press, will
still need to tune in to the foreign-based Zimbabwean radio stations
broadcasting into the country to escape ZBC's turgid programming.
It will, therefore, be
constructive for the ZMC and the coalition partners to clarify the
situation regarding new broadcasting initiatives without delay.
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