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ANC urges speedy establishment of Media Appeal Tribunal

Source: Xinhua   2016-11-24 04:56:43            

CAPE TOWN, Nov. 23 (Xinhua) -- The ruling African National Congress (ANC) on Wednesday called on Parliament to accelerate the implementation of the resolution for the establishment of a Media Appeal Tribunal.

The current Press Ombudsman is not adequate to sufficiently protect the rights of the individual citizens, community and society as a whole, the ANC said in a statement emailed to Xinhua.

"Under the guise of freedom of speech, our media tramples on the constitutional rights of others and in itself begins to constitute the real threat to media freedom, diversity and democracy," ANC national spokesperson Zizi Kodwa said.

This followed the suspension of Steve Motale, editor of The Citizen newspaper. Motale has been one of the few black voices in the industry who upheld the principles of diversity and impartiality.

Motale was suspended after a damning investigation into former finance minister Trevor Manuel, current finance minister Pravin Gordhan and ANC chief whip Jackson Mthembu was published in the paper a few weeks ago.

It appears that Motale has been accused of having a personal vendetta against Manuel, who is white, and of running a campaign against him.

Motale's suspension sparked a debate about the lack of transformation within the media, with particular reference and emphasis on print media.

This is a historical debate, and one, which will be unresolved for as long as there are, within society and the media itself, defenders of a system that is untransformed in terms of ownership, control and management, Kodwa said.

This defence presents itself as upholding media freedom and freedom of speech whilst in reality masking the commitment to undermine the diversity of views and plurality of voices, he said.

"A largely untransformed media, as we have in South Africa, is an offensive against progressive values and ideas," Kodwa noted.

Having understood that the media is a contested terrain and therefore not neutral but reflective of the ideological battles and power relations in society, the ANC has continuously sought to effect fundamental and lasting change in the sector.

"We condemn in the harshest possible terms interference by vested interests in the functioning of the newsrooms and the stifling of editorial independence to drive predetermined agendas," Kodwa said.

Honesty, accountability, fairness and editorial independence are meant to be hallmarks of South Africa's media, however it is increasingly clear that certain sections of the media continue to adopt anti-transformation stances and remain unaccountable to the general public, Kodwa noted.

The ANC proposed the Media Appeals Tribunal in 2010, building on a resolution adopted at the party's 2007 National Conference. The ANC argues that the current avenues individuals can pursue in order to right a media wrong, litigation and complaining to the Press Ombudsman, are inadequate.

Editor: yan
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ANC urges speedy establishment of Media Appeal Tribunal

Source: Xinhua 2016-11-24 04:56:43

CAPE TOWN, Nov. 23 (Xinhua) -- The ruling African National Congress (ANC) on Wednesday called on Parliament to accelerate the implementation of the resolution for the establishment of a Media Appeal Tribunal.

The current Press Ombudsman is not adequate to sufficiently protect the rights of the individual citizens, community and society as a whole, the ANC said in a statement emailed to Xinhua.

"Under the guise of freedom of speech, our media tramples on the constitutional rights of others and in itself begins to constitute the real threat to media freedom, diversity and democracy," ANC national spokesperson Zizi Kodwa said.

This followed the suspension of Steve Motale, editor of The Citizen newspaper. Motale has been one of the few black voices in the industry who upheld the principles of diversity and impartiality.

Motale was suspended after a damning investigation into former finance minister Trevor Manuel, current finance minister Pravin Gordhan and ANC chief whip Jackson Mthembu was published in the paper a few weeks ago.

It appears that Motale has been accused of having a personal vendetta against Manuel, who is white, and of running a campaign against him.

Motale's suspension sparked a debate about the lack of transformation within the media, with particular reference and emphasis on print media.

This is a historical debate, and one, which will be unresolved for as long as there are, within society and the media itself, defenders of a system that is untransformed in terms of ownership, control and management, Kodwa said.

This defence presents itself as upholding media freedom and freedom of speech whilst in reality masking the commitment to undermine the diversity of views and plurality of voices, he said.

"A largely untransformed media, as we have in South Africa, is an offensive against progressive values and ideas," Kodwa noted.

Having understood that the media is a contested terrain and therefore not neutral but reflective of the ideological battles and power relations in society, the ANC has continuously sought to effect fundamental and lasting change in the sector.

"We condemn in the harshest possible terms interference by vested interests in the functioning of the newsrooms and the stifling of editorial independence to drive predetermined agendas," Kodwa said.

Honesty, accountability, fairness and editorial independence are meant to be hallmarks of South Africa's media, however it is increasingly clear that certain sections of the media continue to adopt anti-transformation stances and remain unaccountable to the general public, Kodwa noted.

The ANC proposed the Media Appeals Tribunal in 2010, building on a resolution adopted at the party's 2007 National Conference. The ANC argues that the current avenues individuals can pursue in order to right a media wrong, litigation and complaining to the Press Ombudsman, are inadequate.

[Editor: huaxia]
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