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This article participates on the following special index pages:

  • 2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles


  • Media analysis of the 2008 harmonized elections
    Women In Politics Support Unit (WIPSU)
    March 31, 2008

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    Pre-elections analysis

    Introduction
    The last quarter of the year saw the highly debated 18th amendment to the Zimbabwe Constitution. The Amendment transformed the electoral and political landscape introducing for the first time in Zimbabwe's history harmonized elections. This meant that Presidential, Senatorial, House of Assembly and Council elections were to be held in one day. In addition the amendment shortened the term of office of President and made it run concurrently with that of Parliament. The composition of the Senate and House of Assembly changed with the former to consist of 84 members and the latter to increase from 150 to 210 which meant a restructuring and creation of constituencies.

    Women's participation in elections has largely been covered at the level of voting and campaigning for men. Very few women have been able to break the glass ceiling and make it into positions of decision-making. After the 2005 parliamentary elections, there were only 48 women MPs (i.e. 22%) in the Zimbabwean Parliament, a far cry from the minimum of 50% as set by the SADC Declaration on Gender and Development. Whilst the barriers to women's participation are many and varied, the most fundamental one lie around the media's inability to make women newsworthy.

    The media is a chronicler of events, an informer, an educator, a transformative space and a tool to change society. It has the capacity to make a very positive contribution towards social change. Without a means of communication, women are not participating in governance; instead their male counterparts who have the greatest outreach as they are covered and given voices in the media are making the political decision. With this in mind, it is vital for the media to play its role decisively in order to inform, educate and empower the general public which is a civic right as it feeds to the principle of freedom to access of information.

    The scope of analysis
    The pre-elections media monitoring analysis comes about from a collection of election issues covered in both the private and state print media that is newspapers. The analysis focused on articles from daily and weekly newspapers that is; The Herald, The Sunday Mail, the Standard, Financial Gazette and Zimbabwe Independent as from 01 October 2007 to 31 March 2008.

    The major objective was to find out if the media was able to play its role, mandate and obligation to disseminate information to the general public. Great care was taken to rise above the newspapers biases for example some newspapers are known to only publish pro or anti government. However, the main thrust of the analysis was to find out if the electorate was adequately being informed on electoral issues in order for them to make informed decisions.

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