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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
The
media cold war, Zimbabwe in the spotlight
Itayi Garande, The Zimbabwe Guardian (London)
April 02, 2008
http://www.talkzimbabwe.com/news/117/ARTICLE/2030/2008-04-02.html
Does the mass media have
control over public opinion? The emergence and use of new technologies
like the internet - and the accompanying weblogs - has also led
to the emergence of an opportunistic media.
Yesterday was an interesting
day in which the role of mass media in shaping public opinion got
tested to its limits. Big players like the BBC, Al Jazeera, and
the Washington Post proved to us that they are not immune from the
media rumour mill. Their role in ending conflict became questionable.
Even the seemingly
indomitable US Department of State seemed to have caught on the
bug- "the Zimbabwe election bug."
The day started with
a Reuters story stating that the ruling Zanu PF and the opposition
MDC were heading for a run-off. That story was replaced by another
story that President Mugabe had conceded defeat to the opposition
MDC leader, Morgan Tsvangirai. Then we heard that Mugabe has run
away - left the country for a destination unknown. To spice it all
up, later, in the day, we heard that South African President Thabo
Mbeki would be announcing progress of a deal he brokered for President
Mugabe's resignation, which would culminate in a handover of power
to Morgan Tsvangirai.
All these stories were,
apparently, coming from unnamed sources within the ruling party
- how unusual, we thought.
The cocktail was made
more complicated by a midday Tsvangirai press conference and a Biti
announcement that the MDC had won the election and prepared to form
a government.
In the meantime, the
anxious Zimbabwean people received intermittent announcements of
House of Assembly winners from the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission
- who called for patience. The phone lines to Harare seemed endlessly
jammed and phones in the office didn't stop ringing. Media banned
in Zimbabwe: the BBC, Sky News, ABC, Channel 4, Fox News, etc. were
endlessly calling â"- looking for a Zimbabwe 'political
analyst'.
Many of us developed
'headaches' and 'resigned'. We reached our cognitive capacities;
we couldn't handle the pressure anymore. The rumour mill was in
overdrive.
The
manufacture of consent
Walter
Lippman famously coined the phrase "the manufacture of consent",
enjoining it as a means of population control.
His concept was in full
effect yesterday.
The status of the mass
media and its faithful propagation of the established opinion that
giant media like the BBC, Sky News, Fox, etc is fundamentally infallible
and benevolent in intention, became very important.
Many Zimbabweans trawled
BBC, Al Jazeera, Sky News, CNN websites, Zimbabwe news websites,
blogs and fora to find out what was going on in their country. The
rest of the world did as well. But they got too much unverified
information. So they looked for the most convincing story, yet the
evidence was not forthcoming. Because this is the most media saturated
election ever, unverified reports became difficult to process and
confusing. Too little information, in the information age, leads
to frustration. Too much information from too many sources is overwhelming.
The Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission (ZEC) gave us too little information to feed our huge
appetites; and Western media gave us too much to process. We couldn't
win either way. Yet ZEC could not be pushed; calling for patience
and caution.
Mass media proved to
be the most powerful institution, at least for us in the Diaspora.
Afterall, it is the ultimate source of all our information, more
so if our reporters are not communicating fast enough and their
phones are constantly jammed.
The structure of the
mass media therefore had fundamental implications for the political
and cultural orientation of the public â"- for the perception
we had about the election, about the opposition, about the government,
about the final outcome of the harmonised elections in the country.
Those
who reported first have the upper hand
The opposition in Zimbabwe used international mass media it to the
fullest, are using it to the fullest. They have had three press
conferences so far. They will have another today.
Al Jazeera is exclusively
relaying information worldwide. Even BBC's foreign correspondent
John Simpson had to illegally sneak into the country 'to get a piece
of the action'. This seemed acceptable, after all he was just trying
to inform. Even Newsnight's Jeremy Paxman was sceptical about the
altruism of these media organisations, asking Simpson whether Western
media was trying to advance their own view of the electoral process
in Zimbabwe. He could rightly see how they were trying to shape
public opinion, world opinion, on Zimbabwe.
Paxman's question falls
short of asking: Is US hegemonic expansionism legitimized and veiled
by the mass media?
The world is likely to
see escalating turmoil, violence and instability as the US extends
its tentacles of consolidation to new regions. This expansionism
can only be supported by popular demands for social change within
the Global North as well as the Global South.
Zimbabwean Diaspora communities
are targets in a wider net. They wait in vain for UK Channel 4's
'Press Conference' by President Mugabe to announce that he was stepping
down. It doesn't come. It never was. Yet many believe that it is
coming even though the Information Ministry in Zimbabwe has issued
a statement to refute the claim.
A deeper
look
Yet
a deeper look at the internet and mass media throws considerable
light on the structure of Western media, Western government concerns,
the relationship between that media and governments, the public
and those who possess power, as well as the ideologies produced
by the media and their impact on the public. The role of spin, and
counter-spin came to light.
Western media and governments
are setting the agenda: in China, in Zimbabwe, in Cuba, in Tibet.
If not, as in Zimbabwe, they will set the pace at least. It is big
business, it is in their 'national interests'.
Reporting on conflict
in Asia, the Middle East and Africa is big business for the media
houses. Create media frenzy, create profit. It is big business for
CNN, for google, for the BBC and those who are in it, win it.
The stories are dominating
NATO meetings as I write. A new democracy, United States President
Bush says, is sweeping across the world and changing the changing
nature of NATO Alliance, an expeditionary alliance, with Twenty
First Century capabilities. He wants to 'deploy effectively anywhere
in the World' â"- deploy everything.
The headlines go: "America,
the land of big cars, big dreams, big business.... [commercial]
The political future of Zimbabwe's President Mugabe remains in the
balance. The opposition leader says he has won the election"
This is all to protect
'our citizens' against 911-type ballistics, against the emerging
threat from the Pacific, East Asia, Middle East, Africa. He says
this is urgent.
Bush wants Russia to
join in developing middle range ballistic defences, everyone to
join in, 'so that the attack never comes to pass'. He wants everyone
to join in. He says the Cold War is over. Everyone should join in,
to protect everyone.
Counter
media, counter spin
Yet
Al Jazeera is showing the Taliban using old methods to attack the
'new enemy'. They are using the rudimentary self-defence mechanisms:
they are training their young to resist American occupation.
"The US occupation
will never be sweet, and never be short," Al Jazeera reverberates
as I write. "America's Art of Deception" so goes the headline
of a programme to counter a US program.
China is countering reports
in Tibet by its own versions of events; but is being absorbed by
the power of the Western media. Chinese ambassadors, who are usually
quiet, are bullied into appearing on television to feed the 'media
hunger' - to explain Tibet. Even the Dalai Lama comes out of his
usual nest, he appears calling for calm.
Democracy demands that,
we are made to believe. Yet how could it demand that?
A new Cold War is already
in motion: a media Cold War.
Washington
post rumor mill
A
disturbing picture emerged yesterday of an international news system
that neglects its duties when the concerns of the people of Zimbabwe
are at stake.
The Washington Post's
rumour mill yesterday set the agenda for Zimbabwean politics yesterday,
it set the pace as well and helped shape the prevalent perception
about the electoral process in Zimbabwe.
Many of us could sense
the competition between the BBC and Al Jazeera. The BBC broke Al
Jazeera's exclusivity by dispatching Simpson illegally, and no-one
questioned the ethics behind this.
That foreign media has
failed to accurately portray the real nature of Zimbabwe's political
process to the public, playing instead the subservient role of a
propaganda machine, is therefore quite obvious.
Foreign media, during
this election period, exercises control over what Zimbabweans read,
see and hear. The editors have allowed otherwise respectable media
houses to become propagandistic. The business side is in full swing,
and Zimbabweans are the victims. The motivation for profit through
advertising revenue forces stories to emerge. The media has close
links to, and is often owned by, corporations. They need that breaking
story, that exclusive project; yet their acceptance of information
from biased sources has necessitated and perpetuated propaganda.
It is a truism and is
well documented that the elites who dominate these media houses
are also the decision makers over international politics, trade,
investment, etc. They are also decision makers in key institutions
and they all interpenetrate one another in accord with their shared
values and associations.
Furthermore, due to their
common social position, they are largely socialised into the traditional
values that characterise their wealthy class. This has a significant
impact on their outlook on the world, and consequently their attitude
towards political affairs in countries like Zimbabwe. The BBC yesterday
was quoting 'unnamed sources' in the US State Department; who were
quoting the Washington Post. It felt like they had all ganged up
on Zimbabwe.
The corporate-controlled
internet media yesterday was the principal tool through which the
Zimbabwean public was spoon-fed unverified information. Zimbabweans,
today, should brace themselves for another gruesome day.
We hope that Western
media will not exacerbate and create conditions conducive to a spiral
of violence and confrontation in Zimbabwe, from which no one will
benefit.
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