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Weekly Media Review 2011-2
The Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe
Monday January 10th - Sunday January 16th 2011
January 21, 2011
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Panel-beating
the truth - and an 'intervening' tale
Journalists who ask dumb questions are likely to
make dumb mistakes, one veteran journalist once observed. Local
journalists could well take heed of this lesson following the misreporting
of comments by Attorney-General Johannes Tomana that he would immediately
appoint "a team of practicing lawyers to look into"
a series of cables from US diplomats released by Wikileaks, a whistle-blower
website, while addressing a Press conference in Harare on December
23rd 2010 (The Herald, 25/12/10).
The AG reportedly told journalists that the team,
"comprising five law experts" would "soon establish
whether there was any constitutional infringement" in the
Wikileaks reports and government would "take action guided
by the findings of that team".
But such was
the failure by some media organisations to get the story right that
they misrepresented Tomana's revelations that he would set
up a "panel of experts" to mean he planned to "set
up a commission of inquiry" to "investigate" the
issue (The Herald and Chronicle, 12/1/11; Africa News, New Zimbabwe.com,
24 & 25/12/10).
Only the Zimbabwe Independent (14/1) and The Sunday
Mail (16/1) got it right and clarified the different roles of a
"commission of inquiry" and "a panel of experts".
The Independent, for example, quoted Tomana refuting reports attributed
to him in the official media saying that he would form a commission
of inquiry, saying: "I do not have powers to appoint a commission
or committee. If you look at the scenarios around the appointment
of commissions, it must be of national importance and it is only
the President who can appoint a commission. Our powers are vested
in Section 76 of the constitution. I do not know where all this
is coming from".
He was clearly referring to the incompetent reporting
of those media talking about commissions of inquiry.
But it doesn't beat the deliberate suppression
of the news in the state media that SADC's chief facilitator,
President Jacob Zuma of South Africa, had "intervened"
to put a stop to the headlong rush towards early elections this
year. The Financial Gazette (6/01) reported Zuma's international
relations adviser Lindiwe Zulu saying "there was a lot of
work that needed to be done before the country could hold free and
fair polls whose outcome would be acceptable to all the country's
political parties, SADC and the AU".
"It is an intervention by the facilitator,"
she was quoted as saying. But you could only have guessed at this
from The Sunday Mail's front-page lead story at the beginning
of that week (2/01) about a sudden delay in fulfilling President
Mugabe's desire to hold early elections. This story mysteriously
referred to "intervening complications" being partly
responsible for the delay but didn't explain what these were . . . .
Now we know! Needless to say, ZBC didn't even give its audiences
a hint about this important development. But that would have put
a dent in all that election propaganda it has been airing . . .
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