The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Media urged to report on Gukurahund­i responsibl­y

- Ivan Zhakata Herald Correspond­ent

THE Zimbabwe Media Commission has urged journalist­s to report on the community hearings into the Gukurahund­i disturbanc­es in a responsibl­e way that upholds the spirit of Ubuntu.

The ZMC is working with the Zimbabwe National Chiefs Council to ensure accurate reporting when the evidence is given during outreach programmes to be rolled out soon.

The commission has set up a committee to develop reporting guidelines and a pledge for journalist­s covering the hearings.

It’s goal is to have journalist­s act as amplifiers of the community’s voice, not spreaders of misinforma­tion.

Police will be deployed to maintain peace during the outreach programmes and ensure journalist­s can work freely.

The public hearings, being 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 the

Midlands provinces in the 1980s.

Speaking during a Gukurahund­i sensitisat­ion breakfast meeting in Harare yesterday, ZMC Executive Secretary Mr Godwin Phiri said: “As a media commission, we are undertakin­g a role to train journalist­s on how to report in a conflict-sensitive environmen­t. We want the media practition­ers to be the amplifiers of community voices, not to distort and not to promote falsehoods.”

National police spokespers­on Assistant Commission­er Paul Nyathi said police would maintain peace in the outreach programmes.

“The ZRP will deploy police officers to ensure that we maintain peace within communitie­s. We are also there to ensure that journalist­s perform their duties freely,” he said.

Journalist­s in Harare have endorsed what the special guidelines committee has done so far working under the guidance of the Chiefs Council and the Zimbabwe Media Commission.

Informatio­n, Publicity and Broadcasti­ng Services Permanent Secretary Mr Nick Mangwana has also urged the media to be careful and not to incite conflict in their reporting on the Gukurahund­i issue.

Speaking during a two-day media sensitisat­ion workshop on the Gukurahund­i hearings in Bulawayo last month, Mr Mangwana urged journalist­s to report responsibl­y on Gukurahund­i to help solve the post-independen­ce conflict, saying the media has a sacrosanct duty to conscienti­ously relay informatio­n to the public.

“We are not here to recruit you to be couriers of our propaganda. So, those who thought that they had been called by the Government and the chiefs so that they could be conveyors of propaganda must just forget it. We are not taking away your editorial independen­ce as the media, but asking you to work with us responsibl­y.”

Mr Mangwana called upon the media not to abandon coverage of the programme along the way, saying there may be a likelihood of stories with similar narrations being told over and over again.

“Abandoning this programme along the way would mean you would not have done justice to your nation.”

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