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Election Watch Issue 6 - 2012
The Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe
June 01, 2012

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State media distort UN rights chief's findings

The official visit by UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navanethem Pillay to assess Zimbabwe's human rights situation ahead of anticipated elections - the first of its kind by a UN human rights commissioner - was the most significant political development in the media in a busy month.

Pillay held a Press conference in Harare at the end of her historic five-day visit on Africa Day, May 25th, during which she made damning observations about Zimbabwe's human rights record and its democratisation process since the formation of the inclusive government in February 2009.

Her concerns hinged on the continued existence of various forms of repression, persecution and the lack of respect for the rights and freedoms of Zimbabwean citizens.

These undemocratic tendencies included the "misuse" of legislation by state security agents for "political purposes"; the involvement of the military in the country's civilian political affairs; the persecution of human rights defenders, journalists and political opponents on frivolous grounds; discrimination and criminalization of minorities, such as gays and lesbians; the "strong political bias" of the state media and these media's systematic denigration of human rights defenders "simply going about their job of trying to help promote and protect the human rights of ordinary Zimbabweans"; and the reluctance by the Broadcasting Authority of Zimbabwe to open up the airwaves to private players.

While the media reported on Pillay's Press conference, this was mostly in a selective and fragmented fashion. There was no attempt to give their audiences a holistic, point-by-point summary of the issues she raised in the full context of the country's socio-political crisis.

The state media particularly, failed to report her comments in context by failing to present the facts in a fair and balanced manner. Instead, they censored a number of Pillay's observations, including her advice to bring those responsible for serious political violence to justice, the state media's bias and the need for genuine media reforms, among other issues, and deliberately distorted her positive comments about Zimbabwe's existing "legal framework" as an "admission" that endorsed President Mugabe's demand for elections this year with or without a new constitution (The Sunday Mail, 27/5).

Other state media also paraded her call on the international community to lift sanctions against a small selection of individuals and Zimbabwean companies at the expense of her condemnation of several issues relating to Zimbabwe's human rights record.

The Herald (26/5), for example, tried to obfuscate Pillay's unflattering observations on the country's democratic processes by giving prominence to a "lot of positives" the country had achieved in such fields as women's rights, the acquisition of land by "many small farmers" under land reform, economic stability and government plans to ratify the international Convention Against Torture and Inhuman Treatment.

Even then, the full picture on the "positives" was not totally captured as the story selectively reported these and omitted crucial qualifying statements Pillay also made.

For example, despite reporting Pillay as expressing satisfaction that many small farmers had been given land, they censored her concerns over how the land reform process had "also caused a great deal of misery, not just to former owners evicted without due process or compensation, but also to tens of thousands of farm workers who lost their jobs . . . and in many cases were reduced to total destitution overnight".

There was no mention either of her recommendations for land reform to be conducted "transparently and with clear criteria that are in full accordance with international norms and standards", saying: "There is, after all, no merit in taking sizable quantities of land from one elite, only to give it another. Under the GPA, the parties also agreed to ensure that all eligible citizens who want to have land can do so, and that each individual will be considered without bias. I urge the Inclusive Government to take further steps to carry out these and other key reforms laid down in the GPA."

Similarly, The Sunday Mail (27/5) used unidentified "analysts" who claimed that Pillay "shocked many when she called for political reforms, which are not part of her human rights remit", in what the paper said was an "unmistakable if not embarrassing echo of the election manifestoes of the two MDC formations and their US, UK and EU donors which seek regime change in Zimbabwe".

One of the "analysts" who were identified, ZANU PF's Jonathan Moyo, was reported saying: "While Pillay's Friday Press statement was full of understandable but misplaced sentiments of those who help her pay her bills and whose malicious agenda against our country is now public knowledge, it is notable that she tried to safeguard her integrity by acknowledging that the Constitution of Zimbabwe contains internationally sound provisions for holding free and fair elections but that the challenge is only with the proper implementation of those provisions".

Instead of reporting Pillay's statement in its own right, The Herald report of the following day (26/5) only did so in the context of Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa dismissing her observations as "off the mark" and "unfair". The private media's coverage of Pillay's visit and her Press statement was more informative, though they too failed to provide a succinct summary of her critical Friday statement that included advice to establish a truth and reconciliation commission.

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