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Weekly Media Review 2011-46
The Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe
Monday November 14th - Sunday November 20th 2011
November 25, 2011
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ZANU
PF steps up campaign
President Mugabe's
ZANU PF party appears to have stepped up its elections campaign
activities by joining the MDC-T in holding party promotional events
throughout the country to woo the electorate ahead of potential
national elections next year.
Up until now,
ZANU PF's campaign activities had been largely limited to
the use of music, where songs glorifying President Mugabe and his
party's ideology are frequently and prominently played across
all television and radio stations of the state broadcaster, ZBC
(see section on ZANU PF abuses ZBC). Only Prime Minister Morgan
Tsvangirai's MDC had appeared the most visible party on the
ground, reportedly holding numerous rallies around the country over
the past six months.
ZANU PF's
on-the-ground campaign activities coincided with the party's
preparations for its national conference, to be held in early December,
to formally choose its presidential candidate for national elections.
These campaign
activities formed most (51) of the 59 stories the government media
carried on the activities of Zimbabwe's major political parties
this week. The remaining eight were on the MDC-T. The smaller MDC
faction, led by Welshman Ncube was ignored.
All the reports
on ZANU PF portrayed Mugabe as the most popular leader in Zimbabwe
as evidenced by his endorsement by the party's structures
and provinces (ZBC, 14, 16, 17 & 18/11, 8pm). These reports
also presented ZANU PF as sensitive to the needs of Zimbabweans,
as illustrated by its provision of farming inputs to disadvantaged
farmers and its black economic empowerment drive (ZBC, 22/11, 8pm).
Notably, the public media passively reported on this blur between
government and ZANU PF party initiatives, presenting some of the
coalition government's empowerment activities such as the
black empowerment drive as an exclusively ZANU PF exercise.
The government
media's coverage of the MDC-T was largely negative. This was
typified by their speculative reports depicting Tsvangirai, among
others, as a renegade who had allegedly visited Morocco to mobilize
Western funding to effect "illegal" regime change, as
well as presenting his party as in the process of setting up "reaction
teams" to unleash violence that would create the excuse for
Western military intervention (The Sunday Mail, The Herald and Chronicle,
20 & 21/11).
The private
media carried 32 stories on the parties' activities: Thirteen
on ZANU PF, MDC-T 15, and the remaining four on the smaller MDC
faction. Of the private media's stories on ZANU PF activities,
six were negative, while nine were neutral. MDC-T was given neutral
coverage in five stories and portrayed positively in 10 stories.
Three of the stories on the MDC-N were negative, while the remaining
one was neutral.
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