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Zimbabwe
state media increase ZANU-PF propaganda
VOA News
May 23, 2011
View this article
on the VOA website
Zimbabwe's state media have escalated propaganda for the party
of President Robert Mugabe since southern African leaders met Friday
in Namibia. Analysts say the high level of publicity, including
alleged misrepresentation of facts, appears to be a reaction to
the Southern African Development Community's recent criticism
of the ZANU-PF party.
South African
President Jacob Zuma, chief mediator for SADC on the long Zimbabwe
political crisis, decided he could not attend the region's
summit last week in Namibia, because of South Africa's just-concluded
local government elections.
As a result
of his non-attendance, a late-March communiqué
from SADC's Troika on Politics, Defense and Security was not
put to the summit for discussion or endorsement.
Without naming
names, that communiqué carried heavy criticism of ZANU-PF's
failure to fulfill the 2008 multi-party
political agreement that is the foundation of Zimbabwe's inclusive
government.
Despite the
lack of developments at the Namibia
summit, the pro-ZANU-PF state media has printed and broadcast
stories claiming victories for the party.
The daily Herald
reported Saturday that SADC's Tribunal, a regional court of
last resort, had been disbanded at the Windhoek summit thanks to
ZANU-PF pressure.
The Tribunal
repeatedly ruled the Mugabe government's seizure of white farmers'
land beginning in 2000 was racist.
SADC says it
has not disbanded the Tribunal, but has suspended it until reports
from regional justice ministers and international consultants'
are considered.
Meanwhile, the
pro-ZANU-PF state media has lambasted one of Zuma's mediators,
Lindiwe Zulu, who is also Zuma's international affairs advisor.
The Sunday Mail,
in which the government has a 50-percent stake, carried a report
headlined, "South Africa's Lindiwe Zulu in trouble."
The report says ZANU-PF has formally lodged a complaint with South
Africa's ruling African National Congress, citing several
criticisms of statements recently attributed to Zulu.
The report claimed
Zulu's remarks were taken from the publication, ANC Today - in particular
statements about the succession issue - should Mugabe die in office.
But there is
no record that Zulu made any remarks to any South African media
about Mugabe or the succession issue.
The Sunday Mail
also noted Zulu is accused of saying that anyone in ZANU-PF who
believed elections would be held this year was "day dreaming."
The director
of a Zimbabwean media monitoring group, Andy Moyse, said pro-ZANU-PF
propaganda had escalated to what he called a "deafening crescendo"
in the past few days.
He also said
state media have misreported the contents of the 2008 political
agreement that led to Zimbabwe's inclusive government. ZANU-PF says
in those reports that a new constitution before fresh elections
is not part of the agreement.
Moyse said this
is incorrect, as the political agreement insists all parties draw
up a new constitution that will be put to a referendum before any
new elections.
He said that
report is intended for the domestic audience, while the attack on
Lindiwe Zulu was an attempt to discredit the SADC facilitation team.
That team has recommended regional representatives be sent to Zimbabwe
to help monitor and fully implement the 2008 political agreement.
The SADC Troika
is now expected to forward its recent report on Zimbabwe to the
region's leaders, who are scheduled to meet next month in
Johannesburg.
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