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Weekly Media Review - Issue 5
The Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe
Monday January 31st 2011 - Sunday February 06th 2011
February 11, 2011

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State media steps up the violence propaganda lie

The fresh wave of organized violence that has erupted in Zimbabwe's capital and its suburbs in recent weeks has provided the state-controlled media with another opportunity to intensify its propaganda offensive against Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai and his MDC-T party.

Just as they did in their 2007 "terrorist bombing" propaganda campaign leading up to the 2008 elections, and before that, with the "anthrax terror campaign" ahead of the 2002 presidential election, ZBC and its television news broadcasts are leading a new state media war on ZANU PF's old political opponents in an effort to publicly discredit the MDC-T ahead of fresh elections that President Mugabe has stated must be held this year.

Now, as then, these media are being provided ample support by senior ZANU PF officials and the police in blaming the MDC-T for this most recent spate of violence.

This time, the revolutions in North Africa, Tsvangirai's comments about these events, and the European Union's impending annual review of its targeted sanctions appear to be the incentive and the excuse to portray the MDC-T as a violent party with no evidence yet, beyond police accusations, to support the claim.

The fear of spontaneous national uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt spreading to Zimbabwe appears to have been a catalyst in this latest wave of unrest, which the private media and many civic groups have blamed on ZANU PF supporters and officials.

Although stories of politically motivated violence and intimidation around the country have been consistently reported in the private media for many weeks stretching back before Christmas, the latest reports talk of threats, intimidation and "clashes" between rival party supporters in Harare's suburbs as ZANU PF invades the MDC-T's urban strongholds as part of its election campaign.

These culminated 10 days ago in the violence reported in Mbare and Epworth and coincided with a well-organized ZANU PF demonstration against Harare City Council, ostensibly for slashing urban maize crops.

While the state media refused to identify the political affiliation of the demonstrators then, the spark that provided the state media with the opportunity to open the propaganda floodgates appears to have been Tsvangirai's comments to an international news agency about events in North Africa on January 28th.

These were deliberately and dishonestly distorted by ZANU PF officials to mean that the MDC-T party and its leader - together with its Western masters - were agitating for violent, unconstitutional "regime change".

These observations were then repeated and amplified in the state media, which adopted this description to re-energize ZANU PF's old allegations portraying the MDC-T as a violent party seeking illegal regime change.

While the police initially avoided attributing blame for the latest violence that resulted in the looting of shops in the Gulf shopping complex of Harare's CBD, ZTV's reports in its bulletins on February 8th corroborated this perspective of the violence that has shocked the nation.

ZTV (8/02 8pm) quoted police spokesman Wayne Bvudzijena commenting on the recent violence, saying: "Police records show that 11 cases of violence have this year been recorded, with the MDC-T being implicated while Zanu PF sympathizers were the targets,"

He added: "The MDC-T is an active participator and instigator of violence . . . It is clear that the MDC is orchestrating the political violence in which they cry victim . . . Recent statements by the MDC leadership on the issue of violence appear to suggest that any degeneration of order is welcome in the country. Such language is not expected of leaders. It boggles the mind why some politicians harbour ascendance to leadership through violence destroying the same people they seek to lead . . . "

This allowed ZTV's reporter, Tafara Chikumira, in his report of the violence and looting that affected Harare's CBD, to introduce the topic with the following grossly unprofessional comment: "The MDC-T party is known for its quest for violence . . . Only last week . . . Mr Morgan Tsvangirai's plan to incite members of his party to stage an unsanctioned demonstration against the establishment was thwarted by the country's security forces".

His comments referred to an earlier piece of complete fiction reported on ZBC (all stations 3/2) that claimed "a plan by . . . Tsvangirai to address his party's youths at Town House and incite them to carry out violent demonstrations against the government flopped yesterday." (Spot FM, 8am). It claimed "confirmed reports say . . . Tsvangirai had planned a march from Harvest House to Town house to address his party's youth league under the guise of addressing urban transport operators and touts" and "incite them to follow the Tunisian and Egyptian-style of violent demonstrations the government . . . " which ZTV later said " . . . he is ironically part of". No evidence to support any of these statements was ever presented. ZBC reported the police as "thwarting" the "unsanctioned" meeting. The official media also accused suspected MDC-T supporters of "petrolbombing"

stalls belonging to a ZANU PF official at Mbare's Siya-So market without providing a shred of evidence (The Herald, 7/2). They then reported senior ZANU PF Mbare official Innocent Maseko warning: "We want the opposition leadership to teach their youths to stop violence. They are indulging in violence . . . but when we retaliate they put the blame on us".

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