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Weekly Media Update 2010-31
The Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe
Monday August 9th - Sunday August 15th 2010
August 20, 2010
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The
week's top stories
The eventual
auction of the first batch of Zimbabwe's controversial Chiadzwa
diamonds despite protests by global civic organizations hogged
the limelight in all media this week.
President Mugabe's
visit to China, during which China reportedly extended further financial
assistance to Zimbabwe, came a close second in the government-controlled
media. However, while the government media attached significance
to the trip, the private media paid more attention to the SADC
summit in Namibia, especially on whether it would finally resolve
Zimbabwe's protracted power-sharing dispute. The ongoing public
consultation phase of the constitutional making process also remained
a generally popular subject of debate in all the media: the private
media outlets emphasized problems plaguing it, especially reports
of violence and intimidation, while the official media dismissed
these as a plot to discredit the exercise.
Controversy
dogs Chiadzwa diamonds auction proceeds
While all media publicized
Zimbabwe's first official auction of its controversial Chiadzwa
diamonds, confusion reigned over the exact revenue realized from
the sale.
Although all
the media initially reported the auction as having generated US$72
million (13/8), they later reported Finance Minister Tendai Biti
revising the figure to US$45 million (Radio Zimbabwe, 13/8, 1pm
& The Standard, 15/8). Studio 7 (13/8) added more confusion
to the matter by reporting Biti as saying Zimbabwe "will be
lucky" to get US$15 million from the sale, an amount that The
Standard later indicated was government's share of the auction's
proceeds.
No other informative
updates on the matter were given.
Further, it
remained unclear why the auction covered only 900 000 carats of
gems extracted by Mbada Diamonds and Canadile Miners between May
28, 2010 and September 1 this year. Neither did The Herald (12/8)
explain why the country still required more KP Certification to
sell the other "three million carats" that the two companies
had earlier mined and why this had not yet been given.
The government media
restricted themselves to giving the impression that the sale of
diamonds would bring immediate relief to the Zimbabwean economy
and represented a decisive defeat for those who opposed it. As a
result, they downplayed the fact that some Western buyers had boycotted
the sale.
The private media debated
the matter more widely.
Apart from highlighting
global criticism of the auction, they quoted economists such as
Eric Bloch arguing that the money generated from the sale was not
sufficient to significantly boost Zimbabwe's cash-strapped fiscus
(Studio 7, 12/8). The Zimbabwean On Sunday, ZimOnline and Studio
7 (13 & 15/8) reported that a US-based global network of diamond
buyers, Rapaport Diamond Network, had banned its members from trading
in the Chiadzwa diamonds. These media quoted Rapaport
Diamond Network arguing that although trading in Chiadzwa diamonds
was now legal following their certification by the KP, anyone involved
in them risked expulsion from the network and could face sanctions
by the US and EU. The network cited alleged human rights violations
in Chiadzwa as the major reason for its action.
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