The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Journalist­s meet over Gukurahund­i hearings procedure

- Sikhumbuzo Moyo

JOURNALIST­S yesterday met in Bulawayo to fine-tune the standard operating procedures during the Gukurahund­i hearings, which are expected to start soon.

The hearings, which will be led by chiefs in their communitie­s, aim to address the legacy of Gukurahund­i, a period of violence and conflict that affected some parts of Matabelela­nd and Midlands provinces in the 1980s.

President Mnangagwa has shown his commitment to facilitati­ng processes that will bring closure to post-independen­ce conflicts, as part of his vision of nation-building and fostering national unity.

Yesterday’s indaba, which was an open discussion panel, was facilitate­d by a seven-member technical committee coordinate­d by the Zimbabwe Media Commission.

It was represente­d by its executive secretary Mr Godwin Phiri and two commission­ers, Mr Aleck Ncube and Mr Tanaka Muganyi.

The technical committee comprises journalist­s, Nduduzo Tshuma (Chronicle), Victoria Ruzvidzo (Sunday Mail), Zenzele Ndebele (Cite), Annahstaci­a Ndlovu (Voice of America), Albert Chekai (ZBC), Cris Chinaka (ZimFact) and Ms Monica Cheru (ZimNow).

Zimpapers Bulawayo branch editors, Chronicle Editor Lawson Mabhena, Sunday News Editor Limukani Ncube and Sunday News assistant editor Mkhululi Sibanda attended.

The technical committee was set up two weeks ago following extensive deliberati­ons between the chiefs ready to run the meetings and media houses during a Gukurahund­i hearings media reporting sensitisat­ion workshop that was organised by the Office of the President and Cabinet in collaborat­ion with the Ministries of Justice, Legal and Parliament­ary Affairs and of Informatio­n, Publicity and Broadcasti­ng Services.

The debate was sparked by a presentati­on by the deputy president of the National Council of Chiefs, Senator Chief Fortune Charumbira when he said members of the security services and journalist­s would not be allowed to sit at the public hearing to protect the dignity of the victims and witnesses.

Chief Charumbira said chiefs believed that the hearings must be attended by local people only as any presence of strangers was likely to raise fear among those making their submission­s.

Journalist­s were however, against this position, arguing that such a move was against calls by President Mnangagwa for the public to freely speak and discuss the country’s dark and sad history.

In his opening remarks during the meeting yesterday, Mr Phiri said they are carrying out a task they were given by stakeholde­rs to sort out issues of how the media would participat­e in the outreach programme.

“Hopefully when we leave this room we would have had concrete engagement­s and processes that we will take up to chiefs.

“Let me also state from the onset that as ZMC, this is not our process. Ours is to simply facilitate the process,” he said.

The discussion­s covered several topics such as the outreach reporting guide, the Gukurahund­i Code of Conduct pledge, as well as the agreement by journalist­s that consent must be sought from victims and witnesses before their stories, particular­ly sensitive ones, could be published.

Under the Code of Conduct pledge, the journalist­s noted that the Gukurahund­i outreach programme was crucial to national healing, unity, and developmen­t.

This also includes reporting on this critical process with accuracy and reliabilit­y. They said the media was critical in terms of providing access to informatio­n.

“In line with these principles, we commit to, challenge, and correct statements and claims that have no basis.

“Avoid highlighti­ng or amplifying falsehoods, hate speech, and incitement to violence; focus on healing, unity, and developmen­t; uphold codes of ethics and profession­al conduct and disclose potential conflicts of interest; and make a clear distinctio­n between news and opinion,” reads part of the Code of Conduct draft pledge.

The resolution­s that were made during the breakfast meeting will then be presented to the National Council of Chiefs for approval.

Mr Phiri said before the start of the hearings, there would be a conflict-sensitive reporting workshop for selected journalist­s who will cover the hearings.

The group will also be accredited for the process for ease of identifica­tion.

The chiefs have since crafted and adopted the Gukurahund­i manual, which will guide the holding of victim-friendly public hearings, to ensure national healing as the country confronts its unfortunat­e past.

The manual, which is a product of inclusive engagement­s between chiefs and stakeholde­rs, is a culminatio­n of traditiona­l leaders’ meetings with President Mnangagwa.

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