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Zimbabwe:
Archbishop faces adultery case
Julius
Dawu, World Press
Aug 06, 2007
http://www.worldpress.org/Africa/2888.cfm
The publicized sex scandal
involving the Zimbabwe's outspoken Archbishop Pius Ncube, who is
facing a multibillion-dollar suit for alleged adultery, has not
diverted the attention of Zimbabweans from the economic and political
woes at home as had been widely expected. Instead, the government
media's overkill on the story—largely seen as a government
hatchet job—has stoked fresh debate on the double standards
of journalism ethics in the country.
Ncube was recently sued
by Onesimus Sibanda for an alleged affair with his wife, Rosemary,
a secretary at a church under Ncube's diocese. The aggrieved husband
hired a private investigator, Ernest Tekere, who has since been
unmasked as a handyman for the national spy agency, the Central
Intelligence Organization (C.I.O.). Tekere, who claims to have served
as a policeman, served as head the C.I.O. in Bulawayo during the
Fifth Brigade operations in the early 1980's.
The whopping 20 billion
Zimbabwean dollars ($79 million) demanded by Sibanda is arguably
one of the largest suits in Zimbabwe's legal history. It would seem
the vocal cleric is paying for his "sins" against the
Mugabe regime. Ncube has made headlines for praying for President
Robert G. Mugabe's death. More recently, he said Britain would be
justified in raiding Zimbabwe and removing Mugabe."
The threadbare suit has
been interpreted by analysts and journalists as a planned diversion
from the potpourri of economic and political problems on the home
front. A price slashing campaign launched by the government in a
bid to stop what it called profiteering by industry, has backfired
as Zimbabweans are staring at empty shelves. In what can be equated
to a national closing down sale, Zimbabweans cleaned shops of goods
at knock down prices. Economic analysts warned that the move has
precipitated a major shortage of basic commodities as industrialists
have been forced to sell their goods at prices way below the supply
price. A new law to take effect from August will ban the free importation
of a number of commodities classified as controlled goods and worsen
the food situation.
Ncube, who has bitterly
criticized Mugabe for misrule and human rights violations, was recently
slapped with the huge suit by Sibanda, in a case blown up by the
government press to embarrass the 64-year-old cleric. Ncube is challenging
the suit in what could be a bruising court battle.
The state media went
to town in its coverage, splashing pictures of Ncube naked in bed
with Rosemary Sibanda. The lurid pictures were run in successive
issues of the government-controlled daily papers, the Herald and
the Chronicle, and aired on national television, sparking debate
on the selective application of media laws. Several months ago,
a photographer with the Standard, a privately owned newspaper, was
picked up by the police for publishing a picture of Law Society
of Zimbabwe president Beatrice Mtetwa showing bruises from a police
beating she received following an aborted march by lawyers.
As the case is set for
a show down in the courts, it has emerged that the story was a hatchet
job by government operatives to discredit Ncube, who has remained
the main religious voice against government excesses.
Recently, the government
toned down its propaganda campaign by instructing its media to stop
using Ncube's pictures.
"We are not condoning
what ever improper acts by archbishop Pius Ncube but in the interest
of public good, moral and Christian fabric, the government has seen
it necessary to stop showing Archbishop Ncube's pictures in the
electronic and print media as the matter is now in the court of
law," Information and Publicity Minister Sikhanyiso Ndlovu
said in a statement.
Surprisingly,
there has been an outpouring
of support for the cleric within Zimbabwe. On July 25, hundreds
of people crowded Bulawayo's St. Mary's Cathedral—where Ncube
is the celebrant—to join in prayers for him. The church prayer
service followed the launch of the Pius Ncube Solidarity Coalition
comprising churches, nongovernmental organizations, and political
parties.
Chairperson of the coalition
Effie Ncube, who is not related to the archbishop, said the spiritual
and moral support for the cleric was to ensure he got a fair hearing
in line with international justice.
"Archbishop Ncube
has spoken fearlessly on behalf of us all, and whatever the truth
or falsity of these allegations, we will not allow this great activist
to be silenced," Effie Ncube said.
The coalition is one
of a number of organizations that have condemned the coverage of
the adultery suit as against the ethics of journalism and bordering
on pornography.
Columnist Mavis Makuni
of the Financial Gazette said the state media was trying crudely
and unethically to turn Zimbabwe into a depraved nation of "peeping
Toms" despite government ranting about the negative influence
of the cultures of the West.
"The overkill surrounding
the whole saga raises questions about who was behind it. The government
should not stoop to the level of acting as an 'agony aunt' in the
personal affairs of individuals when there are numerous, serious
national problems to be attended to," wrote Makuni. "If
I were an agony aunt, I would tell Sibanda that a man who feels
compelled to share this kind of personal information about his wife
with the whole nation is making a big statement about himself."
A private investigator
hired by Sibanda supposedly took the pictures over a two-year period
through cameras installed secretly in the archbishop's bedroom.
The authenticity of the footage is being questioned.
"At the time the
pornographic 'peep show' was released into the public domain, most
Zimbabweans were devoting their energies to hunting for food and
other basic commodities in the aftermath of the confusion and anarchy
sparked by Operation Dzikisa Mitengo/Slash Prices," continued
Makuni. "It is cruel and insensitive for the authorities to
try to divert attention from these bread and butter issues by regaling
a harassed population with the obscene details of an individual's
marital problems."
The acquisition
of the pictures by the hired investigator is a precursor of what
is to come when the recently passed Interception
of Communications Bill comes into force. That law gives government
carte blanche to snoop on e-mails, postal mail, Internet, and telephone
conversations in the name of national security.
Vincent
Kahiya, editor of the privately owned Zimbabwe Independent,
said the Ncube incident has greater national implications on the
right to privacy of individuals and the possibility of the government
and the Media and Information Commission allowing state media to
carry out similar exercises on perceived political opponents with
impunity.
"Lest we forget,
parliament recently passed the Interception of Communications Bill
to spy on individuals' phones and other electronic messages. After
the Pius incident, what can stop the media from publishing transcripts
of a cell phone conversation between a C.E.O. and his mistress or,
worse still, the goings-on in hotel rooms occupied by opponents
of the state? Don't say you have not been warned. Big Brother is
becoming more devious," Kahiya observed.
Itayi Garande, in an
editorial that TalkZimbabwe.com aired on Nehanda Radio, the country's
first 24-hour Internet radio news channel, called the Pius Ncube
story despicable journalism, further explaining that the Herald
and Mugabe was keen for revenge on a cleric who opposed mass murder
and starvation.
The Zimbabwe chapter
of the Media Institute of Southern Africa decried the coverage of
the story by the state media, reinforcing concerns that those organizations
were being used as political weapons against perceived enemies of
the Mugabe regime.
"Documentary evidence
such as pictures can be a devastating weapon in the hands of an
investigative journalist. The modern editor, however, lives in mortal
fear of being presented with and unwittingly publishing doctored
pictures. The Ncube story is no piece of investigation journalism,"
wrote Geoffrey Nyarota, an award winning U.S.-based journalist and
managing editor of the online Zimbabwe Times. Nyarota once served
as the editor of the now banned Daily News.
Another writer
and activist, Tawanda
Mutasah, felt that the coverage of the story was a callous attempt
to distract the attention of a nation on its knees through cheap,
scout-camp theatrics and that "half-round chicken kicks"
do not put a slice of bread in the mouths of hungry Zimbabweans.
"Contrary to the
intentions of Mugabe and his cohorts, the matter does not for once
confuse Zimbabweans and the world about the veracity and importance
of Ncube's public moral voice on the morass that Zimbabwe has become,
and on Mugabe's responsibility for the state we are in," Mutasah
wrote.
Prominent lawyer and
Movement for Democratic Change shadow minister for justice David
Coltart told SW Radio Africa that the amount of publicity given
to the issue was highly unusual and lent credence to those who say
it was orchestrated by the state. Coltart added that Mugabe's remarks
a few weeks earlier before the story broke, about some priests who
vowed to be celibate but are not was proof that Mugabe had full
knowledge of the story before the matter came to light.
The South Africa-based
Southern African Catholic Bishops' Conference, in a July 20 statement,
expressed hope that "Zimbabweans and the international community
will not be sidetracked" in their efforts to find "a lasting
solution to the serious problems bedeviling the country in the light
of the allegation against Ncube."
But the Ncube story is
not the first diversionary tactic. In June, six men, including a
former army officer, were charged with treason and accused of plotting
a coup. While they denied the coup plot, political analysts believe
it could have been a ploy to sound warning shots to future aspirants
to the Mugabe throne and deflect attention away from the political
and economic breakdown.
Although Ncube's has
lost some of its heat, the crisis facing Zimbabweans has not.
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