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Weekly Media Update 2010-30
The Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe
Monday August 2nd - Sunday August 8th 2010
August 13, 2010
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The
week's top stories
Harare City
Council's defiance of a government directive to reduce salaries
for council senior management added spice to an otherwise quiet
week in which the government-controlled media flooded their audiences
with news on Heroes' and Defence Forces' Day commemorations.
While the government
media were engrossed in these festivities, they paid scant attention
to warnings of imminent hunger in Zimbabwe and human rights violations,
the majority of which were related to the Constitutional Parliamentary
Committee (Copac)'s consultative programme.
Govt,
Harare City Fathers cross swords over salaries
Clashes between
government and the Harare City Council over alleged hefty salaries
being paid to council executives, reported to be around $20 000
per month, dominated the media's coverage of local government issues.
These comprised
17 (47%) of the media's 36 stories on the local government's operations.
Four were on
a row between Harare Council Mayor Muchadeyi Masunda and Mashonaland
Central Governor Martin Dinha over the governor's alleged resistance
to the council's acquisition of 26 farms from his province for expansion
purposes. The remaining 15 highlighted symptoms of poor service
delivery by local government authorities around the country. These
included shortages of safe drinking water, poor street lighting
and bad state of roads, sporadic refuse collection and outbreak
of water-borne diseases such as Typhoid.
Both the government
and private media publicised the Harare Council's refusal to comply
with the government directive on salary cuts as part of efforts
to improve service delivery. They widely quoted Local Government
Deputy Minister Sesel Zvidzai (head of a committee appointed by
government to enforce the directive) ordering local authorities
to comply with central government's policy stipulating that 70 percent
of council revenue should go towards service delivery provision
and the remainder to salaries (NewsDay & The Zimbabwean On Sunday,
22 & 25/7).
However, The
Herald (3/8) quoted Masunda insisting that council would not slash
the salaries as doing so was not only "illegal" but would
also result in council losing its skilled workers. It quoted the
mayor: "The issue has been blown out of proportion. We will
not trample on employee rights. We will not tamper with their packages."
The paper also
reported Masunda criticising Zvidzai, saying he was "least
qualified" to enforce the government directive without elaboration.
Neither was he asked to explain the purported illegality of the
directive. It was only at the end of the week that a NewsDay (6/8)
story: Govt wins salary war, reported the Harare Council as having
finally bowed down to government pressure to reduce the salaries
following a meeting between Masunda and Zvidzai. However, it remained
unclear how this was going to be achieved, especially in light of
Masunda's vague insistence that council would "continue paying
its workers salaries guided by norms in the region".
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