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Weekly Media Review - Issue 4
The Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe
Monday January 24th - Sunday January 30th 2011
February 03, 2011

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A national uprising by the Egyptian people against their leader, President Hosni Mubarak, attracted the attention of all the media at the weekend.

This historic event followed a similar "peoples' revolt" in Tunisia, which forced its president, Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali, to flee the country three weeks ago.

The political unrest in North Africa comes at a time when the continent was still gripped with another protracted political crisis in Ivory Coast where incumbent president, Laurent Gbagbo, claiming electoral fraud, refused to concede defeat to his political rival, Alassane Quattara, who was pronounced the winner in that country's presidential election last November.

According to MMPZ's research, the government media carried 60 stories on these political crises between January 1st and January 31st 2011. Fifty-seven of them were biased, while three were neutral.

Although the official media admitted that protests in North Africa were popular, they gave the impression that the uprisings were exclusively a reflection of Arab anger against Western-sponsored puppet regimes - rather than the undemocratic and repressive nature of these regimes.

For example, The Sunday Mail (30/1)'s editorial: People's power will always triumph over puppet govts, trivialized these popular Arab protests against authoritarian rule as an uprising against Western imperialism. It gloated: "The Tunisian government's pro-Western stance . . . could not save it from popular anger. The puppet-master relationship has its serious limitations and, for such client states, the moment of reckoning is always a heartbeat away".

The government media's bias was more evident in their coverage of the Ivory Coast crisis, as they openly supported Gbagbo, while expressing outright contempt for Quattara, whom they dismissed as being a puppet of the West. These media all but ignored the fact that Quattara enjoyed widely popular support, as reflected in the election whose result was endorsed by that country's own electoral commission, West Africa's regional bloc, ECOWAS, the UN and the West, led by France.

Notably, the government media's hostile treatment of Quattara appeared to stem from their apparent dislike of candidates from opposition camps, the same way they treat Zimbabwean Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai and his party.

The Herald (26/1)'s columnist Alexander Kanengoni equated Quattara to Tsvangirai, arguing: " . . . As it is with the Ivory Coast, we also have our own Alassane Quattara, people who are prepared to be used as proxies to defend and further the interests of our former colonisers. We have Morgan Tsvangirai and the MDC here".

Earlier, The Herald (24/1) quoted ZANU PF Senator Guy Georgias accusing France of creating a "political mess" in Ivory Coast and arguing that the West no longer had any moral ground to "lecture us on good governance". ZBC adopted the same stance. It likened Gbagbo to Mugabe and viewed him as a victim of Western imperialist machinations because of his principled stance against Western interference in his country's affairs (ZTV, 20 & 27/1, 8pm).

While the official media viewed Tsvangirai's observation that Zimbabwe could experience similar political upheavals if government, especially the ZANU PF side of it, continued to disrespect the peoples' rights (ZTV, 20/1, 8pm & The Sunday Mail, 30/1), the private media argued that such action was highly unlikely as Zimbabweans allegedly lacked the capacity to do so (Radio VoP & NewsDay, 2/2).

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