Wednesday 21 October 2015

Last Moyo Presents Constitution of Zimbabwe

Since constitution is important for all. That is why Last Moyo here presents the constitution .Zimbabwe’s current constitution has provisions for freedom of expression in Section 20.  Specifically, Section 20 subsection (1) states:
Except with his own consent or by way of parental discipline, no person shall be hindered in the enjoyment of his freedom of expression, that is to say, freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart ideas and information without interference, and freedom from interference with his correspondence.
Subsection (2) of Section 20 stipulates the limitations of the freedom of expression as follows:
Nothing contained in or done under the authority of any law shall be held to be in contravention of subsection (1) to the extent that the law in question makes provision—
  • in the interests of defense, public safety, public order, the economic interests of the State, public morality or public health;
  • for the purpose of—
  • protecting the reputations, rights and freedoms of other persons or the private lives of persons concerned in legal proceedings;
  • preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence;
  • maintaining the authority and independence of the courts or tribunals or the Senate or the House of Assembly;
  • regulating the technical administration, technical operation or general efficiency of telephony, telegraphy, posts, wireless broadcasting or television or creating or regulating any monopoly in these fields;
  • in the case of correspondence, preventing the unlawful dispatch therewith of other matter;
While the constitution provisions clearly have freedom of expression as a right, there have been arguments that media freedoms are not explicitly guaranteed in the constitution, to the extent that Section 20 does not provide for media freedoms. Tawanda Hondora, author of MISA publication “media laws in Zimbabwe”, explains that Media freedom is an integral part of the constitutionally entrenched freedom of express. While section 20 of the constitution does not expressly guarantee media freedom, the Zimbabwean Supreme Court has already accepted that “the use of the mail is almost much of free speech as the right to use our tongues”. Use of the word “mails”, Hondora argues, is wide enough to cover both the use of the print and electronic media to communicate information.

Monday 21 September 2015

The Internet

Since 1997 when government commissioned Global One to erect a national and international Internet backbone, the number of dial-up subscribers has always been increasing. According to the Zimbabwe Internet Service Providers (ZISPA), Zimbabwe has more than 35 000 dial-up subscribers who are subscribed with various Internet Service Providers (ISPs) in the country. This is about 3% of Africa’s dial-up subscribers. However, it must be remembered that a lot of people use company accounts and Internet cafes and Internet use in Zimbabwe must be obviously higher than that.
Although 35 000 is a very small number compared to the 2.5 million Internet users in South Africa, the Internet is gradually rising to be the medium of hope for many Zimbabweans. The hope can be seen in the number of Internet cafes sprouting all over the place, especially in major cities of Harare, Bulawayo and Mutare. It is a medium of hope because so far it has not faced as much censorship as the mainstream media do. In view of mounting public criticism and discontent, government passed the Public Order and Security Act in 2002. The law makes it an offence punishable by at least 5 years imprisonment or Z$100 000 for anyone who communicates or publishes anything that is deemed prejudicial to the state interests. The definition of state interests is too wide and all- catching thus leaving the media without any room to maneuver in the discharge of their duties.

Internet Service Providers have also mushroomed to boost Internet availability and accessibility to the public, government institutions and the corporate world. Currently the total number of ISPs in the country is more than five. The major ones are Data Control, Africa Online, M-Web Zimbabwe, Samara and Inter Data while the small and upcoming ones comprise Telco, Zimsurf and Icon Internet.
Zimbabwe's eight major papers are all now published on the Internet and news is delivered timely mainly to a very small but extremely influential urban audience. Consequently, the Internet has removed the constraints of time and space in the distribution of news in Zimbabwe. The state-controlled media's agenda setting efforts do not go unchecked because of the Internet’s augmentation of the free flow of information in major cities.
The Internet has also grown to epitomize a platform where people of various walks of life in Zimbabwe have found expression, from the gays and lesbian associations, political parties, to human rights activists. In fact, government, civil society and the opposition in Zimbabwe have taken full advantage of the Internet as a tool for advocacy and lobbying.
There are however, still some serious obstacles that the Internet faces. First, its biggest obstacle seems to be the growing poverty. The average price for a computer in Zimbabwe is about Z$250 000 and Internet installation costs are also prohibitive. Poverty forces people not to prioritize their informational needs. Emphasis is given to their daily material needs. In 2002 charges for a service at the Internet cafes ranged from Z$150 per 15 minutes to Z$350 per hour. These costs are too high for many Zimbabweans. This has culminated in an information class structure where the majority of the people are info-poor while only a few are info-rich. This has invariably made the Internet just another elitist public sphere in Zimbabwe.
The poor telephone national grid is another impediment to Internet accessibility, availability and affordability. The national grid is far below giving a complete and national coverage as it consists of only about 212 000 lines. There are about more than a 100 000 outstanding requests for connection in the country. The government- owned Tel One is failing to meet fixed line telephone demands but remains the sole provider of the landline service.

Friday 4 September 2015

POST-INDEPENDENCE MASS MEDIA

After independence the character of the print and electronic media generally reflected the interests of the new black leadership. The structural organization and output of the public media glaringly reflected a strong grip by the new black political elite who showed no remorse in using the public media to push for their class and party interests. To start with, the critical distinction between party and government was blurred with the ruling party directly imposing itself on national institutions, including of course, the national media. The control of the national media had always been subtly, and internal and external reasons had always been used to justify the control of the media. Firstly, there was the real threat of apartheid South Africa that had a series of destabilizations in the 1980s. Secondly was the controversial internal civil strife in Matebeleland, which government used to impose a state of emergence in the region and squash oppositional discourses in society and the media, in particular.
The developments in the media after independence therefore need to be seen in the context of these factors and the tightening of control over debate and political expression by the ruling party. Although it was generally believed that the media was going to be primarily guided by the new national goals of development, decolonization and democratization, in reality government used it to undermine some of these noble goals.

Print and Electronic media 1980-2002

i. The public press

Table I: Major papers



At independence the RPP was changed to Zimbabwe Newspapers (Zimpapers), a public quoted company listed on the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange. However ownership of The Herald and The Chronicle continued to be in the foreign hands of the South African APP, and this remained a thorn in the flesh of the new government. In 1981, with a grant of US $ 6 million from the Nigerian government, the government bought about 45% of the APP shares at Zimpapers. This ensured government of the control that it desperately wanted, and later on, it increased its shares to 51%. Generally, all the state controlled newspapers have served as a mouthpiece for the government since independence. This has tended to affect their circulation adversely. For example in 2000, the circulation of The Herald fell from 90 000 to 60 000 a day because of direct state interference in its editorial issues (The Daily News, May 21,2001, p6).
Although the public print media are sometimes erroneously referred to as the national media, it is actually misleading to speak of the national media in Zimbabwe. The reality is that most of the newspapers are regional papers.
The Herald and its weekend sister paper, The Sunday Mail, give coverage mainly to
events taking place in Mashonaland, especially Harare, whereas The Chronicle and The
Sunday News tend to focus on the Bulawayo city, Matebeleland and the Midlands region. In a research conducted between January and May in 1999 by the Media Monitoring Project of Zimbabwe (MMPZ) the organization discovered that Harare takes about 80% of space in The Herald whereas areas in Matebeleland only have 4% of the space in the paper. However, things are slightly different with The Chronicle as coverage is at 38% to 49% respectively.
The circulation of newspapers is normally limited to urban areas because it follows the road and railway network between towns and cities. Although literacy is around 80% in Zimbabwe, readership of newspapers is affected by the rural and urban population divide. About 64% of the adult population in Zimbabwe lives in rural areas while 36% lives in urban areas. Rural areas are inaccessible due to the poor road infrastructure that has tended to compound distribution problems in rural areas.

a. The Mass Media Trust (MMT)
In 1981, an ‘independent’ Board of Trustees called the Mass Media Trust (MMT) was formed to run the national public media on behalf of government and the people. The  MMT, dissolved in 2001, was supposed to act as a buffer between the government and the publicly owned media such as Zimpapers and the national news agency, the Zimbabwe Inter-Africa News Agency (ZIANA). The Board was also going to be responsible for the employment and firing of the key staff like editors and managers.
The independence of the MMT was important in the new dispensation in that while government wanted to control the mass media, it also at the same time needed donor assistance and funding which came on condition that it upheld the principles of a free media and an independent judiciary.
In principle, the MMT enjoyed some level of independence in that although the Minister of Information appointed its members, he could not however, remove them from office once appointed. In reality, the MMT became an instrument of entrenching government control. Dr. Nathan Shamuyarira who was the Minister of Information at the time, appointed his friends and ruling party loyalists who barely knew anything about the media. Dr. Davison Sadza, the inaugural chairman of the Board of trustees of the MMT, was a personal friend of the minister and a devout ruling party supporter. As a result, it became very easy for the minister to be directly in charge of the MMT as he dictated to them on what to do. A number of editors from the public print media such as Farayi Munyuki, Henry Muradzikwa and Geoff Nyarota were fired from their positions by the government as a result of the lack of autonomy by the MMT.
Nyarota’s case is probably the most tragic one in the history of journalism in Zimbabwe. In 1989 Nyarota who was the editor of The Chronicle, exposed a scandal involving cabinet ministers who bought cars from a national car assembly plant and resold them to the public at exorbitant prices. This profiteering scandal became popularly known as the Willogate scandal. Nyarota was removed from his position and ‘promoted’ to a previously unheard of post of Director of Publications at Zimpapers. Although editors of the public media had been fired from their positions as far back as 1983, the Nyarota case had been positively unique in that the public media were beginning to try to hold the government responsible and accountable to its own people through investigative journalism.
The MMT, as many came to realize, was merely a strategy by government to allay the fears of the donor community and white journalists who threatened to live the country if political interference were to persist after independence.
Although the MTT was seemingly diversified in its composition, its members did not represent any organized groups with common interests. This weakness meant that the trustees could not speak on behalf of anyone as they lacked a clear-cut public mandate.
The government manipulated this flaw to ensure a tight and complete grip on Zimpapers.
Although political interference in the public media persisted, the MMT never said anything and a culture of political interference developed with each and every Minister of information after Nathan Shamuyarira making sure that the media were kept under a tight leash.
In 1995, the Cabinet ordered the MMT Board to amend the Trust deed to allow the president and Minister of information to give directives to the Board formally without any questioning or resistance. Direct control and manipulation became incessant, ruthless and unbearable with the advent of Professor Jonathan Moyo as the Minister of State for Information and Publicity, in 2000. Since his arrival to replace Chenamo Chimtengwende, the public media has faced turbulent times and editors of the public media keep getting fired and replaced by those who are most loyal to him. Foreign journalists have been part of the list of casualties. Mercedes Saygues, a free lance for the South African Mail and Guardian and BBC correspondent, Joseph Winter, were deported in February 2001 for allegedly giving Zimbabwe a hostile coverage.

b. The Matebeleland civil strife
After independence, the government’s wish to maintain a monolithic environment had its practical manifestation in what is generally referred to as the Matebeleland crisis. In 1982, government forces moved into the Matebeleland area to squash the support base of the major opposition party, ZAPU, in a bid to create a one party state. The Matebeleland region is home to the Ndebele ethnic group that comprises about 15% of the total Zimbabwean population. The other ethnic group is the Shona people who are about 70% of the Zimbabwean population. Although both ethnic groups rallied behind ZAPU in the early years of colonial resistance, things changed when a splinter group of the radicals, the Zimbabwe African National Union Patriotic Front (ZANU PF) was formed in 1963. The Ndebele people remained loyal to ZAPU while the majority of the Shona people shifted their allegiance to ZANU PF. The latter, led by Robert Mugabe, won the 1980 elections and ZAPU won some seats and became an opposition that enjoyed parliamentary representation. This was not conducive for ZANU PF plans for a one-party state that it pursued openly until 1990. More than 20 000 civilians were massacred by the Korean trained Fifth Brigade whose presence in the region was purportedly to fight an insignificant number of dissidents who were linked to ZAPU. In addition to this, a lot people were raped, maimed, detained and thousands disappeared.
The government declared a state of emergence in the region for more than five years and it was impossible for the media to investigate developments in the region as some places were declared out of bounds. The editorial comments of The Chronicle, whose editor was Nyarota at the time, show that the paper was entirely supportive of government action. One of the private newspapers, The Daily News, which is ironically under the editorship of Nyarota, tried in vain in 2001 to serialize a Catholic Commission of Justice and Peace (CCJP) report of the atrocities. The efforts failed after Nyarota was vilified by government and civic groups in Matebeleland as a hypocrite.
The Matebeleland massacres marked a dark period in the history of Zimbabwean journalism as it led to the establishment of a culture of self-censorship in the public media. Since then a culture of self-censorship, fear and government praise continued to thrive in the public media.

c. The Community Newspaper Group (CNG)
The CNG was a product of government’s emphasis on the so-called development journalism in the early eighties. The government believed that newspapers were supposed to serve as a linking device between the state and the governed, and also serve as a platform for the executive to articulate government policy. CNG newspapers are funded by the public and give coverage to various provinces in Zimbabwe
The CNG publishes six community newspapers namely, The Times for Midlands, Masvingo Provincial Star for Masvingo, Indonsakusa/Ilanga for Matebeleland North and South, The Mashonaland Telegraph and The Guardian, for Mashonaland Central and Chaminuka News for Manicaland and Mashonaland North provinces. The print run for these newspapers is estimated at not more than 10 000.


ii.The Private press
The private press has been by and large, an active force in the struggle against the abuse of human rights, justice and other civil liberties by an increasingly intolerant and oppressive black ‘minority’ government in Zimbabwe. It has indeed been the mother of the democratisation agenda in the post-independence Zimbabwe. This agenda, broadly embraced by the mainstream civil society and the general public, has led to a serious polarisation between not only the public media and the private media, but also the general Zimbabwean society.

Table II: Major newspapers


The post-independence period saw a proliferation of a number of private newspapers and magazines. In 1980 Moto resurfaced as a magazine, still with its characteristic critical stance of excesses in government. The magazine, still owned by the Catholic Church, was the only medium that dared to expose the Matebeleland atrocities perpetrated by the government. Later The Parade magazine also resurfaced but continued to shun politics as it had done during the colonial period. It continued with its big colorful pictures that were believed to attract a big readership from the blacks. The Parade is owned by Thompson Publications, and Alex Thompson who is the Managing Director has 51% shares while other minor shareholders share the other spoils.
The 1990s saw a mushrooming of more private and civic print media that was representative of the diverse interests in the country. Women, academics, churches, pressure groups and political parties used these media to articulate their interests and participate in the public sphere. Although some of these media have disappeared due to harsh economic times, the major ones are, Social Change and Development for academics, Mahogany for women, Speak Out, People’s Voice for the ruling party, The Worker for the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) and The Socialist Worker for the International Socialist Organization (ISO). The impact of these newspapers and magazines on the politics of the day is however low because of their very low circulation. A magazine called The Horizon however made immense contributions to democracy in Zimbabwe by exposing corruption and economic mismanagement in government even though it was poorly distributed.
In 1992, Modus Publications that was owned by Elias Rusike, added a second title to The Financial Gazette, a paper that has a subtle mix of financial and political news. The Daily Gazette was the first attempt to challenge The Herald monopoly in Harare. It however collapsed due to advertiser resistance and under capitalization.
In 1998 a new private company called the Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe (ANZ) introduced about eight newspapers. The papers comprised, inter alia, The Daily News, The Dispatch, The Express, The Mercury and The Tribune. All the papers collapsed because of advertising problems, except for The Daily News. The advertising ‘cake’ in Zimbabwe was estimated at $500million in 1999 and must have gone down significantly afterwards due to the deepening economic crisis in the country.
The Daily News has always faced serious financial problems. For example, in October 1999 the paper was on the verge of collapse when it was reportedly failing to settle a Z$60 million debt. The paper survived through the benevolence of the Southern African Media Development Fund (SAMDEF) who loaned ANZ about Z$37 billion.
The ANZ is not only faced by the financial problems that pause a big threat to the diversity and plurality it offers, but also the politics of the day.
In January 2001, the newspaper’s printing press was bombed and destroyed after the Minister of State for Information and Publicity, Jonathan Moyo and the war veterans publicly castigated the paper for ‘celebrating’ the death of Laurent Kabila of the D.R.C. Laboratory tests revealed that the bomb that had been used was a military one and only trained people could operate it. In February 2002, the paper’s Bulawayo offices were also petrol bombed. The Harare offices had also been bombed in 2000 in the run up to the parliamentary elections.
At the time of inception, ANZ’s ownership structure was 60% foreign and 40% local and government was not happy about this. When government planned to legislate against foreign ownership in the media, things began to change however. The ANZ is now entirely owned by local businessmen comprising the Independent Media Group (IMG), Diamond Insurance Company and other small stockholders. In 2001, another private company called Asset Management indicated that it wanted to purchase about 60% of the shares at ANZ. This was going to make it the prime shareholder at the ANZ. However, some shareholders disproved of the move and this culminated in a protracted litigation process in the courts that has spilled into 2002.
The Zimbabwe Independent and The Standard, formerly owned by Clive Murphy and Clive Wilson, are now owned by IMG, Managing Director Trevor Ncube and other minor shareholders. The IMG has 49% shareholding at The Independent while Ncube holds the remaining 51%. The IMG also holds 36% of the shares in The Standard while Ncube and Mark Chavunduka, editor of the paper, holds 39% and 25% respectively.
The Zimbabwe Independent targets the business people but also publishes some significant amount of political news. The Standard, launched in 1997, has always been very critical of the government and in 1999, its editor, Mark Chavunduka and journalist Ray Choto, were tortured by the army after publishing a story about a foiled military coup. In reference to the incident on 9 January 2002, General Vitalis Zvinavashe who is the commander of the army, warned the private press for being overzealous and ordered the press to stop publishing such stories.
The private press however is not without weaknesses. To some extent the newspapers lack in-depth analysis of issues in their news. The press suffers the dilemma of how to be critical of its government without necessarily playing into the hands of other manipulative global forces that may not be fascist in orientation but in motive. The land question in particular has never been well told in the private press because the history behind the problem has always been emphatically ignored.
The other problem is that of an ethical vacuum. Ethics are severely flouted in both the private as well as public press. In 1999 two journalists from The Sunday Mail were arrested after a businessman who they had solicited for bribes from so as to give his businesses a positive coverage, trapped them. In view of such problems, government appointed a Media Ethics Committee in 2001 to investigate ethics in the Zimbabwean media and the report was released early 2002 with recommendations for a Media Regulatory Council. Again in February 2002, Basildon Peta, a revered journalist from The Financial Gazette, resigned disgracefully from the paper after he allegedly wrote a false story for The Independent in United Kingdom claiming that he had been detained in the police cells for a night for participating in a constitutional advocacy march. This epitomised the rot that is plaguing the press in Zimbabwe where impartial and factual journalism seems to have been replaced by advocacy and highly opinionated journalism.


iii.Broadcasting
The Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC) remains a monopoly even after the introduction of the Broadcasting Services Act, in 2001, a law that purports to liberalize the airwaves. Zimbabwe still does not have community broadcasters or private commercial broadcasters. The law, generally seen as more draconian than the laws of the colonial regime, prohibits foreign broadcasters and stipulates that all stations must broadcast 75% local content. Although the law set up a Broadcasting Authority to preside over licensing and ethical issues, in reality the Minister of State for Information and Publicity has all the powers as licenses must be given or withdrawn at his discretion.
It is important to state that the Broadcasting Services Act, was crafted in a context of an emergency when the Supreme Court had ruled that the 1957 Broadcasting Act that gave ZBC a monopoly was unconstitutional as it infringed on the freedom of expression. Immediately after the ruling, two private radio stations, Capital radio and FM100 started broadcasting from secret locations. Government used the Presidential powers to pass an emergency law to deal with what it called the ‘invasion of the airwaves’.
The ZBC is a commercial public service broadcaster which is funded through license fees and advertising. Government stopped funding the station in 1996 when the commercialization of ZBC was officially inaugurated. ZBC is divided into two sections, Zimbabwe Television (ZTV) and Radio services. While television enjoys about 55% national coverage, radio has close to 65% national coverage. Although ZBC erected a Short wave radio transmission backbone in February 2002, areas such as Plumtree, Binga, Hwange and Chiredzi still have an extremely poor reception of the broadcasting signal.

a) Television
Television broadcasting consists of two channels, ZTV1 and ZTV 2. Through the Vision 30 ZBC Restructuring program (V30) effected in late 2001, ZTV1 was divided into four portfolios namely, Newsnet (for news), Sportsnet (for sports), Kidsnet (for kids) and Production Services, for outside productions. Since the inception of V30, programming on television has changed from a heavy foreign content bias to a serious local content thrust so as to fulfil the 75% local content legal demand. Although this broadcasting law was crafted in the context of resisting global culture and the subsequent cultural domination, local film and program production capacity is still glaringly lacking and weak. Technology and expertise are still lacking. As a result, programming on ZTV1 is largely dominated by repeats and audiences have shown their resistance through keeping their screens mute, watching videos and satellite television for those who can afford. In 1999, about 179 000 people watched DSTv and SABC and satellite viewers are likely to have increased because of the fall in broadcasting standards at ZBC between 2001 and 2002.
ZTV 2, formerly an educational channel, is rented to some private station broadcasting only within the capital city. In 1997 there used to be three renters namely, Munhumutapa African Broadcasting Company (MABC), LDM Broadcasting Systems and Joy TV. MABC collapsed after it was denied the space when it broadcast a programme on the Matebeleland crisis. LDM also collapsed due to financial problems. Joy TV, owned by Leo Mugabe (President’s nephew), James Makamba and Ishmael Kadungure is the only one that has survived. The station broadcasts from 5pm to 10pm everyday for Harare residents only. Programs are mainly entertainment, consisting of soaps, drama and music. The station also broadcasts delayed and censored BBC news bulletins.
Although there have been several changes in television and radio broadcasting after independence, in reality nothing much has changed in terms of political control. Like during the RF period, broadcasting is still tightly controlled by the Minister of State for Information and Publicity. His department operates directly under the president’s office. Broadcasting continues to be closely guarded by the ruling party that has always ensured that it uses it as its propaganda machinery. For example, in 1999 when the Zimbabwean nation tried to craft a new constitution, MMPZ monitored the television news and discovered that of the 67 voices they had on the issue, only four were of the ordinary people while 32 were ZANU PF officials.
The coverage of the presidential poll in 2002 was not any different either. According to findings of the MMPZ, ZBC television carried a total of 402 election campaign storiesin its news bulletins monitored between December 1, 2001, and March 7, 2002, the penultimate day of the election campaign. Of these, 339 of them (84%) favored ZANU PF’s presidential candidate. Only 38 (or 9%) covered MDC activities, but virtually all of them sought to discredit the opposition party and its candidate. The other 24 reports gave publicity to the other three candidates contesting the election. Coverage of the presidential period on radio was the same (MMPZ Report, 2002, p3-4).

b) Radio
Numerous changes have taken place in radio since independence. In 1980, government introduced four channels consisting of Radio One, Radio Two, Radio Three and Radio Four. Briefly, Radio One targeted English speakers, mainly diplomats, while Radio Three was basically for the youth as it focused on popular African-American music. Radio Two and Radio Four broadcast mainly in Shona and Ndebele and targeted mainly the ordinary people of diverse backgrounds.
The introduction of V30 saw a lot of changes not only in names but also in programming. Most of the stations are still in the process of trying to establish an identity in line with the new policy regulations.
Spot FM (formerly Radio 1), broadcasts in English and seems not to have fundamentally shifted from its talk shows focus. Some slight changes seem to be taking place in musical content though as more local music is now played at the station. Radio Zimbabwe (formerly Radio 2) continues to broadcast in Shona and Ndebele, targeting the general population in its various manifestations. Radio 3FM (formerly Radio 3) broadcasts in English and still targets the youth. Its music complexion has changed from foreign pop music to local pop that is played by youths who borrow the American pop music formats and inject local experience and languages. National FM (formerly Radio 4) broadcasts in all national languages that include, among others, Shona, Ndebele, Xhosa, Kalanga, Chewa, Nyanja, Venda, Tonga, Suthu, and Nambya.
The ZBC ‘monopoly’ has led to the mushrooming of donor funded satellite radio stations that are broadcasting from outside. The Voice of the People (VOP), set up on 16 June 2000 in Netherlands, broadcasts locally- produced programs in Shona, Ndebele and English through the Short Wave band.
Radio Africa, run by Zimbabweans for Zimbabweans, broadcasts from the United Kingdom on the Short Wave band. The station ran two interesting programs towards the presidential elections, ‘Party Politics’ and ‘Newsreel’. ‘Party politics’ offered an open platform for people to discuss politics while ‘Newsreel’ offered news from the perspective of those ostracized by the ZBC.

Monday 24 August 2015

STUDY BY LAST MOYO

INTRODUCTION
The state of the media in Zimbabwe today can only be seen and understood through the prism of the local and global historical developments that took place in the last hundred years. These developments, occasioned by the political, economic and cultural forces at play during the colonial and post-independence epochs, have had a lasting impression on the mass media of this country. This article endeavors to unravel the narrative of these historical developments and how they account for the state of the mass media in Zimbabwe today. It looks at the interplay between the local and global forces during the colonial and post-independence periods, and how these manifest themselves in the mass media today. The article focuses at the colonial period, Black Nationalism and resistance period and the post-independence period and shows how developments in these eras have dovetailed to form the countenance of the media today.
This article discusses the history and current state of mainstream media in Zimbabwe. Advertising and Public Relations, the arts, film, telecommunications, and the Internet are also discussed. Although these media have not really acquired the state of mass communication in Zimbabwe and other African countries, they are discussed alongside radio, television, newspapers and magazines, which enjoy a fairly higher appeal and circulation in comparison.

BACKGROUND
The winds of change that cut through Africa, Asia and Eastern Europe in the nineties did not spare Zimbabwe. After attaining independence in 1980, Zimbabwe clearly desired to take a socialist policy path as evidenced by the centralization of the economy, politics, and the restrictive media environment, especially in broadcasting. For instance, the Broadcasting Act (1957) that was used by colonial governments to ensure state monopoly in broadcasting continued to be used after independence until 2001 when the Supreme Court struck it down.
Although the 1979 Lancaster House constitution clearly enshrined the freedom of expression and multi-party politics, the government had a solid plan of creating a defacto one party state and promoting its policies by maintaining a monolithic environment in the media. Any efforts to the contrary by the state were merely cosmetic so as to placate the donors and the international community. The confidence to embrace the socialist policies was obviously inspired by not only the global bipolar politics, but also by the country’s intimate relationship with the Socialist block during the struggle for independence. Countries like Cuba and China whose influence continues to deepen even today, were the linchpins of Zimbabwe’s independence.
Although the print media environment had always been deregulated and pluralistic even during the colonial period, both the public and private media still operated with great caution in the post-independence era as the media environment remained a minefield due to the restrictive laws acquired from the colonial period. These laws include the Criminal Defamation Act, Official Secrets Act, Public Order and Security Act (promulgated in 2002 to replace the Law and Order Maintenance Act).
Like its colonial predecessor, the new black government also used extra judicial and underhand strategies such as eliminating good editors by ‘promotion’, and also intimidating and torturing journalists. For example in 1985, veteran journalist Willi Musarurwa was dismissed from The Sunday Mail editorship for his unwavering commitment to truthful and courageous reporting.
It is a fact therefore that while the outside world was misled to think that Zimbabwe was democratizing her institutions, things were actually taking a different direction on the ground. The reconciliation with the white community made Prime Minister Robert Mugabe pose as a democrat and statesman to the world. However, unlike the South African reconciliation process that was underpinned by strong guarantees of human rights, the Zimbabwean process had an effect of strengthening a culture of state domination, ruthless governance and impunity (Carver, 2000,p3). Zimbabwe was therefore essentially a closed and authoritarian society during the first decade until the nineties when government succumbed to the pressure from the World Bank and the IMF to liberalize the economy and democratize politics.
The Economic Structural Adjustment Program (ESAP) was introduced in 1991 and this culminated in a hesitant pursuit of free market economics in the country by the government. The beginning of the liberal economic policies led to the proliferation of private players in the economy including magazines that gave a platform to a number of growing voices of dissent in the country. The private press has remained the kingpin of the democratization process through the articulation of the alternative views from mainly the opposition, civic organizations and the masses.
The pressure from the private press has continued to mount on the government not only to open up and democratize, but also to stop the mismanagement of the economy and corruption. This pressure seems to have reached unbearable levels for government after the introduction of The Daily News in 1999. This private daily newspaper, together with other newspapers like The Zimbabwe Independent and The Financial Gazette, has almost submerged the state-controlled media in directing public opinion on issues such as the economic crisis in the country, the land question and the DRC war where government continues to be heavily involved.
Although the private media has managed to offer a tinge of optimism for self determination for the 12.8 million Zimbabweans, doom and gloom still plagues this nation. The challenges that lay ahead are far much bigger than those that the people have conquered in the past. The economy is in shambles with inflation at 112% (six times the SADC average), unemployment is above 50% and external debt is US$700 million. The government has failed to meet its obligations several times now. Above 60% of the people live below the poverty datum line and commercial agriculture that employed above 66% of the labor force, has collapsed. Many industries have folded due to foreign
currency shortage and lack of respect for private property. Social and health services have also collapsed and about 2000 people die every week from AIDS. The average life expectancy has fallen to a harrowing 37 years for the majority of poor Zimbabweans.