This follows a special meeting of the SABC Board
News Committee held in Johannesburg, in which the board reaffirmed
its commitment to its news division's unfettered editorial independence.
The SABC board called the special meeting to deal with concerns
following concerted pressure which is increasingly being placed
on the newsroom by political parties and allegations of bias
levelled against its news division by political parties. The
attendees at the meeting included board members, senior editors,
provincial editors and executive producers.
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The SABC board is extremely concerned by this external pressure
and believes that it has the potential to seriously undermine
the editorial independence of the news division,” Bheki
Khumalo, the chairperson of the committee, said.
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Executive producers, in particular, complained about the pressure
that they are being subjected to by political parties and other
individuals, and were of the view that this would escalate as
we get closer to the elections,” he added.
In the meeting, examples were given of threats levelled against
some journalists and of SABC news staff being subjected to ongoing
verbal abuse by politicians. According to a press statement from
the SABC, the board and management “has full confidence
in the integrity of its staff and the editorial processes and
will work on the assumption that decisions that are taken in
good faith, unless there is concrete evidence to the contrary”.
Following steps agreed upon
The meeting agreed to take the following steps:
- The stakeholder relations programme will be brought forward and
meetings with political parties will be held before the end of
the month. The meeting will discuss SABC's preparations for the
elections and any concerns the parties may have.
- Over and above the ongoing monitoring that the SABC has contracted
out to independent companies, further independent media monitoring
- dealing specifically with election coverage - will be conducted
to beef up its systems of checks and balances.
- In addition to the normal channels available, SABC News is setting
up the office of a complaints officer who will deal with all
complaints submitted in writing by political parties within 72
hours of submission. The name and contact details of this officer
will be forwarded to all relevant stakeholders.
- There will be an internal campaign to re-affirm the primacy of
the broadcasting charter, ICASA regulations and the editorial
code in terms of election coverage and news broadcasts.
- There was also an acknowledgement that while SABC journalists
have the constitutional right to hold political views, inter-
or intra-party political activism or factionalism has no place
in its newsrooms. Action will be taken against anyone employed
who promotes political activism and factionalism within the newsroom.
The committee acknowledged that there may well be operational
challenges within the newsroom and will consider legitimate complaints
from political parties and the public about any aspect of the
SABC News' operations, provided that these are substantiated.
The board, as the custodian of the editorial code, also stated
that it will protect its editorial team from political parties
or individuals who issue threats or abuse - verbally or otherwise
to any of its editorial staff. It requests that legitimate and
substantiated complaints must be dealt with in terms of the procedure
set out above.
The SABC also said it would meet political parties later this
month (November 2008) to discuss the 2009 elections because it
was concerned about pressure being placed on it.
Rashweat Mukundu
Programme Specialist: Media Freedom Monitoring
MISA Regional Secretariat
21 Johann Albrecht Street
Private Bag 13386
Windhoek, Namibia
Tel: + 264 61 232 975
Fax:+264 61 248016
Mobile: 00 264 813 675 362
E mail rashweat@misa.org, misaalerts@gmail.com
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