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Media Commission interviews
Munyaradzi
Bwanya
August 15, 2009
There has been
extensive media coverage by the State system on the issue of conduct
and results of the Media Commission interviews at Parliament earlier
this week. One wonders if the public is so gullible as to believe
the Herald or ZTV versions of anything apart form soccer results.
Right minded Zimbabweans have their curiosity stimulated each time
state media tries to force down their throats a certain point of
view.
The
facts
Standing Orders
and Rules Committee is the administrative authority of Parliament
in which the three political parties are represented. The composition
of the SORC is reflective of the composition of Parliament. The
ruling MDC and opposition ZANU PF have almost the same numbers of
representatives. The current composition was agreed in the GPA and
is a departure from the usual one. The provision constituting the
current SORC forms part of the temporary amendments to the constitution
and falls away at the end of the lifespan of the inclusive government.
Its main function is to run Parliament as a Board of Directors would
do a private company. What this generally means is that decisions
are made by consensus or by majority vote. Given that, the minority,
it is not likely to get its way with appointments to senior parliament
jobs or other posts.
The Zimbabwe
Media Commission was the smallest in terms of the number of applicants,
it had around eighty and only 28 were short listed. The Commission
has a minimum membership of 12 and SORC had settled for that minimum.
A report was presented to the SORC indicating that a panel of experts
was selected to avoid the cumbersome job task of having politicians
do the interviews and adjudicating that report was accepted without
objection. The task of the Panel was to, shortlist the applicants,
craft the questions and withhold them from the politicians until
just before the interviews. It was resolved that all applicants
would be asked only the same questions without the option of follow
up questions as it would be a departure from the set questions.
It was agreed that the public would be invited only as observers
and that the candidates would be ranked thereafter according to
performance as number 1 to 28 (one candidate was absent on the day
of the interviews, therefore 27)
What
transpired?
On the morning
of the interviews, the secretariat having organized all necessities
promptly for the 9am interviews to start at 9am sharp, some senior
ZANU PF members showed up and questioned the integrity of the panel
of experts as if they were not represented in the SORC. The ploy,
which succeeded was to become part of the adjudicating panel in
order to determine who would land the posts. Eventually, it was
agreed that for progress sake, the politicians would have a parallel
grading process. This meant that each candidate was interviewed
once but graded under two separate processes. The interviews then
commenced.
The
interviews
The caliber
of applicants was generally high and public opinion was not far
from the actual results. Lawyer/journalist Chris Mhike was outstanding
even some of the ZANU PF judges ranked him highly. Several others
did very well. There was some comic relief in the public gallery
when Dr Chivaura, for some odd reason decided to play the language
card to sway the judges by addressing them in Shona, it failed dismally.
The judges politely asked him to use English instead. By far the
most dismal performance was from the unpopular Dr Tafataona Mahoso,
who, in all frankness chose not to answer the questions put to him
at all. Instead, he chose to arrogantly tell the panel what he thought
they should know about him. The gentleman seated next to me could
not resist whispering "off topic" a popular term used
mainly by teachers such as Mahoso himself to mean irrelevant or
more politely to mean that the answer is wrong or divorced from
the question.
Adjudication
It is common
cause that with interviews, the candidate who answers the questions
best to the satisfaction of the judges, normally gets the job. As
for the candidates who attempt to answer but do so incorrectly,
their fate is obvious. Very little is known on how to handle a candidate
who decides not to answer the questions asked at all.
The parallel
processes produced almost entirely similar results. Of the panel-s
first 12 "successful applicants" almost 10 were also
part of the first 12 on the list of politicians. There was a variation
of about 3 or 4 names as well as the placing of candidates on either
list. This means the politicians agreed with the panel as far as
at least 9 of their choices were similar. Funny enough, the bottom
5 on their list had the same names, this pointing to the inescapable
conclusion that there was agreement as to which candidates performed
the worst. Surprisingly a Dr so and so came last on one list and
22nd on the other, it reminded me of the famous Learnmore Jongwe
statement on a TV debate to the effect that if this was the caliber
of DRs we had in the country then we were doomed. Remember that
these rankings were done separately. The question is whether the
names of the failing candidates should be forwarded to the President
as eligible for appointment to the Commission.
It seems the
right thing to do for the SORC is to submit the names of the candidates
on whom both the ranking processes agreed as being irrefutably eligible.
To discard the whole bottom 10 names as they failed the interviews
and then submit the names of those falling within the grey zone
as possible appointees. The purpose of the interviews would have
been achieved as opposed to having the failed candidates being treated
the same as those that passed. To do otherwise would be to say the
President can unilaterally appoint anyone short listed which is
exactly the mischief meant to be addressed by having interviews.
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