“The
role of the press with respect to Zimbabwe's political; social and economic
changes as we move towards 2018 should not be underestimated. The media is
capable of highlighting on the past, the present and help the people establish
how best to model their future. Media is as essential as our daily bread as it
plays an outstanding role in creating and shaping of public opinion and
strengthening of society,” wrote Pythias Makonese in The Zimbabwean.
If
the truth be said, and it must, Zimbabwe's private media has not done the
nation any great favour by slavishly supporting the MDC even as the later
blundered from pillar to post.
Although most reporters and editors alike would agree that Zanu PF rigged the 2013 elections, for example, and yet very few, if any, of our independent media houses have a consistent position on the matter. First, they accepted Tsvangirai’s claim that the elections were “stolen”, they then welcomed MDC’s “No reform, no election!” stance and now the same media practitioners have accepted MDC’s position to contest next year’s elections with not even one reform implemented – no questions asked of MDC leaders.
Although most reporters and editors alike would agree that Zanu PF rigged the 2013 elections, for example, and yet very few, if any, of our independent media houses have a consistent position on the matter. First, they accepted Tsvangirai’s claim that the elections were “stolen”, they then welcomed MDC’s “No reform, no election!” stance and now the same media practitioners have accepted MDC’s position to contest next year’s elections with not even one reform implemented – no questions asked of MDC leaders.
SADC
leaders warned Tsvangirai and friends not to contest the 2013 elections with no
meaningful reforms in place. The private media never quizzed MDC leaders why
they did not paid heed to the warning then or after Zanu PF rigged the
elections and thus proving MDC leaders had been foolish to ignore the warning.
We
know that not even one meaningful reform has been implemented since the rigged
July 2013 elections and so SADC’s warning not to contest next year’s elections
with no reforms is even more relevant today than in June 2013. MDC leaders
themselves have already made up their minds to contest the elections regardless
of the certainty that Zanu PF will once again rig the vote as before.
“We
have come up with our own new strategies which are smarter that we are going to
use in wiring and wining the elections,” claimed Obert Gutu, MDC-T spokesman.
“I think you are now hearing us talking about the wire trajectory, which is our new strategy, because obviously we are budgeting for the worst case scenario where the regime is not going to budge because very little in terms of reforms has been done and we will be fools to think that Zanu PF is going to give in.”
This
is just grandstanding and posturing to justify why the opposition is once again
contesting flawed elections. With no reforms in place Zanu PF is certain to rig
the vote just as easily as it rigged past elections.
You
would agree with me that many, if not all, of our private media houses have
swallowed MDC’s empty rhetoric hook, line and sinker with no questions asked. The
media have accepted MDC’s “wire trajectory strategy” for example as if this is
a well establish and proven strategy one would sooner question Charles Dawn’s
evolutionary theory than question MDC’s wire trajectory strategy.
The
people of Zimbabwe desperately need some guidance on whether to take part in
yet another flawed elections or heed SADC leaders’ advice and demand the
implementation of reforms before elections. Whilst I agree with you, Makonese
that the “media is as essential as our daily bread as it plays an outstanding
role in creating and shaping of public opinion and strengthening of society”. But
even you will have to accept that our media, by slavishly supporting MDC’s
blunders have been totally useless to the nation, at best.
Zimbabwe’s
private media has been slavishly supportive of the opposition parties at the
expense of informing the public just as the public media has been slavishly
supportive of Zanu PF.
“Our Zimbabwe media should be depolarized and be totally removed from the
ruling party politics. It must be defined not on the basis of its ownership but
on the basis of what it does professionally. Recognition of equality of all
human beings with the understanding that there are no human beings that are
more equal than others. We voted for a constitution which should be respected,”
concluded Makonese.“We should all play our part for a better Zimbabwe – come 2018.”
Time
is the enemy of us all; the media practitioners must get their act together and
act decisively now; not tomorrow and certainly not next year, because it will
be too late. The people of Zimbabwe must either to participate in next year’s
elections or ignore the whole shebang and just concentrate on demanding the
implementation of reforms before elections. People must decide now because, if
they are going to participate, the process kicks off with voter registration
next week, 4 th September. Time is of the essence!
A “better Zimbabwe” has remain as elusive as the mirage lake
because those better entrusted to advise the people have, more often than not, ill-advised
them. If the people of Zimbabwe participate in yet another flawed election
process it will be because the country’s media let the nation down, again!
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