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Archive for the 'Media' Category

The very unprofessional Sunday Mail

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Monday, June 13th, 2011 by Bev Clark

The Sunday Mail advertises itself as Zimbabwe’s leading family newspaper. Their last edition featured an incredibly gruesome photograph of two burnt corpses. Fatalities from a vehicle accident that involved a fuel tanker on Boschoff Drive in Harare. Yes, one might think that the Sunday Mail photographer, Believe Nyakudjara, would have snapped the wreckage of the vehicles, but instead this is what gets dished up. The Sunday Mail’s appalling lack of professionalism and sensitivity must be roundly criticised.

Bad publicity for a beauty pageant

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Monday, June 13th, 2011 by Lenard Kamwendo

A couple of weeks ago Lungile Mathe was dethroned as Miss Tourism Zimbabwe (Miss Personality). This happened before she could receive her prize money, a car as well as other extras for scooping the top position in the beauty contest. The dethronement came after reports in the press that our beauty queen was offering sex in exchange for money. Whether this was true as reported in the press, or not, I believe the Zimbabwe Tourism Authority (ZTA) boss should have at least made some time to investigate the issue and consult his boss, the Minister of Tourism, before sending a text message firing Lungile.  Mr Kaseke went on to label the queen “a woman of loose morals” something, which I think, was harsh and unprofessional.

When all this hearsay drama was happening the Minister of Tourism was overseas trying to sell the Zimbabwe brand. When he came back the whole issue took a new twist with the Minister telling Mr Kaseke to reinstate the beauty queen and apologise to her and the nation. In the Sunday Mail of June 13 2011, Mr Kaseke said they are now thinking of giving back Lungile her title. But is it going to do any good to the model, the country and even the Miss Tourism as a brand?

One thing the Minister should do is whip his subordinate into line because since the event was a national event one should not wake up and grab a phone texting dismissal messages. Since the tables have turned the ZTA boss is now eating his words.

Democratising technology

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Friday, June 10th, 2011 by Bev Clark

Last year Kubatana engaged Freedom Fone, our sexy IVR system, to solicit feedback from the general public on Zimbabwe’s constitution making process; what they want, what they don’t want. I see Iceland is using the Internet to open up their constitution making process to the public.

Sistas get on top

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Wednesday, June 8th, 2011 by Bev Clark

Men. Poor, sweet babies. Their masculinity threatened by women who earn a decent dollar and live independently. Sistas wear the pants in Kenya. Zimbabwean women in the Diaspora doing it for themselves.

Neo-liberalism

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Wednesday, June 8th, 2011 by Bev Clark

Got an extreme opinion? Then share it with Rejoice Ngwenya. XO2 is a new e-discussion forum for sharing liberal opinion & life-changing ideas on free markets, effective democracy, property rights, good governance, human, economic and political rights. Email your opinion to epolitrix [at] gmail [dot] com

I’m Neo-Liberal, Like You
Rejoice Ngwenya, XO2 this Wednesday!*

Virulent opponents of neo-liberalism will advance a myriad of ‘empirical evidence’ how this ideology is responsible for Africa’s woes. Central to this diatribe is an argument by leftist ideologues that the continent’s economic decay was triggered by our succumbing to IMF-prescribed ‘neo-liberal’ Structural Adjustment Programs. I have listened with a keen sense of bewilderment when so-called pan-Africans froth at the mouth laying the blame on this ideology even for Africa’s inability to mitigate natural disasters!

According to Wikipedia, neo-liberalism is used “to describe an internationally prevailing ideological paradigm that leads to social, cultural, and political practices and policies that use the language of markets, efficiency, consumer choice, transactional thinking and individual autonomy to shift risk from governments and corporations onto individuals and to extend this kind of market logic into the realm of social and affective relationships.”   So what is it about such pleasant ideology that African intellectuals find revolting? Or it is a case of whenever a political system appears to challenge nationalist dogma; it is easy to blame it in on ‘agents of Bretton Woods institutions’! Whenever habitual critics of liberalism are sobered down to rational debate, one gets horrified that their paranoia is founded on populist conjecture rather than facts. Such critics, given a chance, would slide into gluttonous self-abandonment only equal to those they label as ‘capitalist pigs’!

If you are African, and you consider as repulsive the brand of economic models that sent countries of Julius Nyerere, Kenneth Kaunda and Robert Mugabe to the gutter, you are a liberal like me! Liberalism is, at least from a simplistic world view, a natural instinct of true democrats. Those who resent a life of excessive state control, rabid public expenditure and populist subsidies; and who love to choose goods and services in an open market, believing that individual liberties are supreme – are on my side of the liberal ideological divide.

Fine, all types of economic systems are susceptible to failure yet critics of neo-liberalism from ‘troubled’ African countries would rather do exile in ‘liberal’ Europe than ‘socialist’ Cuba. Classical hypocrisy! In South Africa, ANC party hardliners who want to rub hot pepper on political competitors first accuse them of ‘neo-liberal’ tendencies. If you really wanted to be accepted in the circle of the ‘concerned social beings’, the fashionable thing is to label someone a member of the ‘neo-liberal’ Democratic Alliance. Simply because the DA is ‘led by a white’, there is very little effort required to disown us African liberals as agents of ‘Apartheid imperialism’!

In Zimbabwe, liberalism is associated not only with social injustice and collapse of social service infrastructure, but also corporate failure. The ‘hottest’ case at the moment is imminent demise of ReNaissance Merchant Bank largely due to corruptive bad governance. As a liberal, I insist that free market economy laws take precedence and ‘allow’ this bank to close before the contagion of incompetence spreads. Going the ‘Obama route’ of dispensing public funds to bail out blatant greed is blight to liberal ideology.

Adam Haupt, a Mail & Guardian blogger recently wrote: “If it [DA] wants to claim that it has broken with its racially divisive past, then it should take a long and hard look at its own neo-liberal economic policies.” He continues: “The real way to build an inclusive society is to ensure that all people are involved in securing social justice. You cannot leave it to the market to generate a better life for all…”

According to this Haupt school of thought, neo-liberalism is a scenario where heartless free market policies isolate the poor blacks, abandons them to suffer in silence, discarding them to endure the vagaries of white capitalist greed! This is the tragedy with so-called African ‘liberation scholars’. They are purveyors of radical activist paranoia that drives innocent citizens towards leftist dogma with senseless accusations of an ideology they choose to misunderstand.

State-run companies Zimbabwe Electricity Supply Authority, National Railways Zimbabwe and Zimbabwe Mining Development Corporation are basically bankrupt. People of Matebeleland and Manicaland are persistently mourning how Harare has ‘centralised’ every aspect of national governance thus resulting in ‘marginalisation’. If you strongly feel that citizens in those regions be allowed to exploit and distribute their own local resources, you are a liberal like me who believes in devolution.

Human rights activist Elinor Sisulu is quoted:”South Africans must take note from Zimbabwe that media freedom is not just a liberal democratic notion, but a matter of life and death.” Progressive Zimbabweans are mourning about ZANU-PF’s hegemonic hold on public media. Zimbabwe boasts some of the most repressive media laws in the world, with no local private radio or television station. And so if you strongly feel citizens must be free to operate their own local broadcast networks, you are, after all, neo-liberal like me!

Uprisings in east and southern Africa

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Friday, June 3rd, 2011 by Bev Clark

Uganda’s Walk2Work campaign, growing public consciousness in Kenya, Swaziland’s pro-democracy demonstrations, public sector protests in Botswana and the still invisible LGBTIQ movement feature in this week’s reflection on struggles for social justice across the continent, by Sokari Ekine. More here