Private Print Media, the State and Politics in Colonial and Post-Colonial Zimbabwe Sylvester Dombo Private Print Media, the State and Politics in Colonial and Post-Colonial Zimbabwe Sylvester Dombo Simon Muzenda School of Arts, Culture and Heritage Studies, Department of History, Archaeology and Development Studies Mashava Campus, Great Zimbabwe University Masvingo, Zimbabwe

ISBN 978-3-319-61889-0 ISBN 978-3-319-61890-6 (eBook) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-61890-6

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This Palgrave Macmillan imprint is published by Springer Nature The registered company is Springer International Publishing AG The registered company address is: Gewerbestrasse 11, 6330 Cham, Switzerland To my wife, Shylet, my beautiful daughter, Cassandra, and the big man, Takunda. I love you all! Declaration

I declare that this book is a product of my own independent primary and secondary research. Where other scholars’ works are used, I have always acknowledged them by way of referencing fully. I solely remain ­responsible for any shortcomings that may be found in this book.

vii Preface

This book is an outshoot of my 2014 Ph.D. thesis in the School of Social Sciences at the University of KwaZulu-Natal. Its main focus is to draw our attention to the impact of newspapers on democracy in a third world country, drawing from two newspapers that operated in different epochs. One is the African Daily News, which was published during the ­colonial period between 1956 and 1964. The other is the Daily News of the post- independence period published between 1999 and 2003. The book argues that these two newspapers, which were eventually shut down by the colonial government led by and the Mugabe government during the post-independence period, were a thorn on the side of the respective governments. The African Daily News did not start its life as a revolutionary newspaper. It was in fact a mouthpiece of the colonial government: ­supporting the government of the day while curtailing the birth of nationalism as it advocated gradual processes towards gaining independ- ence. But it was an alternative source of news as it had the distinction of being the frst and only daily newspaper meant for the African reading publics. Later, with the failure of racial cooperation under the Federation of and , the African Daily News would transform itself into a radical publication, fully supporting African aspirations for self-determination. It gave voice to African leaders who led the struggle for independence. Ironically it was the same Africans who would several decades later mastermind the muzzling of the press after independence.

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Press restrictions during the colonial period were motivated by the desire to silence the Africans and even to starve the reading publics of alternative news. In addition, restrictive legislations would insulate the colonial government against attacks by the newspapers. Such legislations­ as the Law and Order Maintenance Act were used to silence the African Daily News in the “interest of public safety and security.” The book looks at the politics of representation: Whose rights were the colonial government representing when it shut down the newspaper? In addi- tion the various responses generated by the closures will be analysed. Such analysis inevitably shows that the African Daily News had become a strong force in the country’s populations. Its editors and journalists were summarily deported and others were arrested. Prominent Africans who worked for the African Daily News would quickly fnd careers as politicians fghting for the independence of the country. Zimbabwe got ­liberated on 18 April 1980. But independence did not herald a new beginning in press state relations. The fact that independence was masterminded by very same people who bore the brunt of colonial injustice and repression is inter- esting for this book project. President was once the Information and Publicity Secretary for his political party. Nathan Shamuyarira, a popular newspaper editor of the African Daily News, would later become the frst Minister of Information at independence. Others like Willie Musarurwa became editors at state media house. They all got their experiences from colonial institutions that they saw operat- ing daily. They defnitely learned a thing or two from their colonial mas- ters. They would later craft policies that fundamentally stifed the press, culminating in the closure of several newspapers in post-independence Zimbabwe. This was the fate of the Daily News; a victim of people who claimed to have fought for democracy. Operating under the motto “Telling it as it is,” the Daily News became the second daily newspaper in independent Zimbabwe after the Daily Gazette. Formed during the period generally regarded as the cri- sis period in Zimbabwean politics, this book argues that the newspaper became like an activist press, actively campaigning against the ruling­ party. This set it on a collision path with the government, eventually leading to its closure in 2003. So what does the story of the newspapers teach us on the role of the press in a democracy? The book shows that there is indeed need for checks to the executive; the fourth estate is needed in any democracy. Preface xi

However, the power of the fourth estate can be easily diluted and weak- ened by several factors ranging from legislations such as the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA), which hamstrung the operation of journalists and the private media in Zimbabwe. My argument is that the ZANU PF government, much like the colonial government, has continued to control the public media and when chal- lenged, its representatives quickly used their majority in the legislature to come up with laws that entrenched their rule and muzzled the press. But the closure of the daily newspapers in both epochs, though ­disastrous, allowed for the growth of a vibrant underground media that continued to challenge authorities. Such underground media in both instances continued to provide information as well as to act as a check on the excesses of the governments of the day. They provided a differ- ent challenge to the authorities as they couldn’t be shut down like the African Daily News and the Daily News. To me this shows that the ­newspapers are not a weak force in politics. Because of their malignant infuences, the authorities are always wary of an independent and vibrant press of the calibre of the African Daily News and the Daily News.

Masvingo, Zimbabwe Sylvester Dombo Acknowledgements

This study was made possible by partial funding I received from the Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa (CODESRIA) through a small grant I received for a thesis writing competition. I also acknowledge the Ph.D. bursary I received from the School of Social Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal that enabled me to carry out feldwork in Zimbabwe. I also recognise the support I received from many people, whose input went a long way towards making this thesis a success. First and foremost I appreciate the unending support and encouragement I got from my Ph.D. supervisor, Thembisa Waetjen. She kept checking on the status of the project. To you I say it is fnally done! I would like to thank Dr. Joseph Mujere for encouraging me to ­pursue this topic. The journey started in his “dungeon” at the University of Edinburgh in 2010, where he encouraged me to enroll for a Ph.D. Since then he has been my mentor and friend, and I would like to thank him for the “open heart surgery” that he taught me when things were not going particularly well for me. Finally I would like to extend my gratitude to my family for the standing­ by me, especially Donald Dombo and his family, and all my brothers and sisters for their prayers and all kinds of support. Special mention goes also to my DP Evangelist “Masvosve” Kandemiri for your prayers and belief in me. Last but not least I would also want to thank my wife, Shylet, our lovely daughter, Cassandra Jahdiel Dombo, and the man of the house, Takunda Dombo, for all the support and comfort. Be blessed.

xiii Contents

1 Introduction 1

2 Colonialism and the Development of the Press in Zimbabwe 5

3 African Newspapers and the Development of the Private Press in Rhodesia 21

4 African Daily News and Early African Politics in Rhodesia 51

5 ‘We Are at a Political Crossroad’: Press and Politics in Rhodesia, 1958–1964 83

6 Press and Politics in Independent Zimbabwe to 1999 121

7 “Telling It Like It Is?”: The Daily News and Zimbabwean Political Crisis to 2000 153

8 ‘Uneasy Bedfellows’: The Daily News and The State 1999–2003 181

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9 Predictable and Unavoidable: The Closure of the African Daily News and Daily News 209

10 The Rise of the Alternative Media 231

11 Press and Politics in Zimbabwe: Concluding Remarks 243

References 259

Index 275 Abbreviations

AIPPA Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act ANC African National Congress BSAC British South Africa Company CAP Central African Party CFU Commercial Farmers Union CNC Chief Native Commissioner DRC Dutch Reformed Church LOMA Law and Order Maintenance Act MDC Movement for Democratic Change MISA Media Institute of Southern Africa MMPZ Media Monitoring Project of Zimbabwe MP Member of Parliament NAD Native Affairs Department NCA National Constitutional Assembly NDP National Democratic Party POSA Public Order and Security Act RF Rhodesia Front UDI Unilateral Declaration of Independence UFP United Federal Party UNIP National Independence Party URP United Rhodesia Party UZ University of Zimbabwe ZANU PF Zimbabwe African National Union- ZAPU Zimbabwe African People’s Union ZCTU Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions ZNP Zimbabwe

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