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Weekly Media Review 2011-20
The Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe
Monday May 16th - Sunday May 22nd 2011
May 27, 2011

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Media slow to report SADC rights court mothballing

The removal of Zimbabwe's power-sharing crisis from the agenda of last weekend's SADC extraordinary summit in Namibia due to the absence of South African President and SADC facilitator, Jacob Zuma, diverted media attention from pertinent developments that emerged at the meeting.

Chief among these was the SADC leaders' decision to extend the suspension of the SADC tribunal for a further year pending another review of its mandate and functions.

The tribunal was already under suspension since last August, triggered by SADC leaders' reluctance to enforce the regional court's 2008 rulings that declared Zimbabwe's controversial land reforms unlawful, which the ZANU PF government at the time refused to honour.

The national broadcaster, ZBC, and most of the private media did not report this important development, which threatens to undermine the court's current mandate to provide justice to SADC citizens when all legal avenues in their own countries have been exhausted.

They only woke up to the newsworthiness of the development several days after the summit. For example, the national broadcaster, ZBC, reported the news three days later, while it took the private electronic media seven days to realise its importance.

Only SW Radio Africa (20/5), The Herald (21/5) and The Sunday Mail (22/5) provided contemporary reports on the tribunal's suspension.

But The Herald (21/5) and The Sunday Mail (22/5) reported this news from a ZANU PF perspective. The papers passively quoted ZANU PF Foreign Affairs Minister Simbarashe Mumbengegwi revelling in the decision: "So today, we have completely and totally dissolved the tribunal".

The government media also presented the rescheduling of SADC's hearing on Zimbabwe's power-sharing problems as a diplomatic victory for President Mugabe without coherently explaining how.

ZTV (21/5, 8pm), for example, reported how President Mugabe had "seconded SADC Troika Chair's motion to postpone the meeting" in the midst of "much noise and lobbying to have Zimbabwe grilled" and "put in the corner" by "foreign funded hostile media".

Earlier, all ZBC stations (20/5, 8am) reported sources solely attributing the deferment of discussions on the Zimbabwe crisis to Troika Chairman Rupiah Banda's observations of a "number of inaccuracies" in the Livingstone report without linking it to Zuma's absence.

The private media largely concentrated on publicising the suspension of the discussions, which have now been provisionally scheduled for South Africa in June.

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