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Inclusive government - Index of articles
MDC
applauds Media Conference as positive first step
Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC)
May 11, 2009
The MDC applauds
the inclusive government for the Media
Conference held in Kariba at the weekend which we hope will
set the tone for media reforms which are an imperative if Zimbabwe
is to become a true democracy.
Though the conference
was blighted by the justified absence of some key players in the
media industry, we note with approval and satisfaction the readiness
of the ministry of Media, Information and Publicity to play an active
part in the changing times by partaking in a constructive and profitable
process which should lead to a multiplicity of media players so
that we give Zimbabweans the wide choices they deserve.
Of particular
interest is among other issues, the noble intentions of repealing
AIPPA
and other retrogressive laws, emphasis being of ZBC shifting from
being state media to being public media as this would help the editorial
policy to be public oriented and to reflect the will of the people
as opposed to the will of politicians who may come and go.
As the Minister of Information
rightly noted, the polarization of the past must spur the media,
especially the public media, to begin to play their oversight role
and not to be appendages of the First Estate. The media must checkmate
other sectors including politics and must not themselves be engrossed
in retrogressive habits such as unbridled propaganda and hate speech.
We believe that media
players must take advantage of the changing environment to reclaim
their rightful place and to exploit the new and exciting opportunities
that come with a changing society; a society rebuilding itself after
decades of monopoly and exclusivity. A society that wants to build
a pluralistic and diverse media environment so that Zimbabweans
can make informed decisions.
The obtaining environment
where the true story of Zimbabwe is told by foreign stations such
as the SABC and e-tv is a negation of the very sovereignty that
some of us had turned into a slogan in the past five years. The
very fact that those foreign broadcasting stations have more viewer
ship than the ZBC is an indictment on our industry. It is a challenge
which the inclusive government, through the ministry of Media, Information
and Publicity, must confront and remedy as a matter of urgency.
Media reform
is not only an imperative reform as captured in the Global
Political Agreement signed by the three major political players
on 15 September 2008. Media reforms are also cited as a key performance
area for the ministry of Media, Information and Publicity at the
Victoria Falls retreat hosted by the Prime Minister of Zimbabwe,
the Right Honourable Morgan Tsvangirai. We want to see the change
now!!!
The MDC hopes that Zimbabweans
will begin to see real action and real change on the ground. The
Herald, the ZBC and other media must begin to actualize and translate
into reality the vision as articulated by the Minister; vision of
diversity, tolerance and multiplicity of voices in both print and
electronic media. The MDC hopes that the conference in Kariba results
in tangible deliverables reflected by a plural media environment
characterized by many daily newspapers, community radio stations
and multiple broadcasting stations. We must give Zimbabweans a choice.
We must give Zimbabweans a media buffet from which they will feast
on the diverse happenings in our country.
The MDC is a party of
excellence. We believe that the continued detention of media, civic
and political activists blights any work towards democratization.
The continued persecution of journalists is an indictment undermining
the positive integrity and value of the conference. We call for
the immediate release of all activists so that together, we chart
the way forward for a free and independent diverse media which is
a primary ingredient in the making of any democracy.
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