Umsebenzi Online, Volume 9, No. 15, 4 August 2010

In this Issue:
- Do we need an independent media tribunal? Red Alert:
Do we need an independent media tribunal?
By Jeremy Cronin
It is generally considered unwise for a politician to debate critically
with the media through the media about the media. You don't exactly
enjoy home-ground advantage.
This has been obvious in recent weeks with the re-surfacing of the
debate around the ANC's 2007 national conference resolution on an
independent media tribunal. There has been a back-lash barrage of
negative editorial comment directed against the three or four ANC and
Alliance comrades who have had the temerity to raise the tribunal
proposal again.
Yet beneath the negative barrage some interesting issues have emerged.
In the first place, notice how senior journalists are divided on
whether to respond positively to ANC Secretary General Gwede Mantashe's
invitation to have an open and frank discussion on the matter at
Luthuli House.
While unhappy with the tribunal proposal, Rapport columnist Jan-Jan
Joubert nonetheless criticises a certain "English-language newspaper
editor" for not taking up the opportunity of a frank engagement with
the ANC. I assume Joubert is referring to Business Day's Peter Bruce,
who in his own weekly column this Monday confirms that he will not be
attending the meeting "on principle". Clearly Bruce is only prepared to
play when there is home-ground advantage.
But in his previous week's "Thick End of the Wedge" column Bruce
himself made a number of enlightening admissions. Bruce conceded that
the present self-regulatory, print media ombud arrangement is woefully
inadequate. He also noted that when newspapers were required to publish
an apology they often buried it obscurely, in contrast to the original
offending story which might have been emblazoned in a prominent place.
Bruce assured us that as editor, at least of Business Day, he would
always seek to publish an apology on the same page as the original.
And, indeed, true to his word, within a week, this Monday the Business
Day was carrying a front page apology to Minister Siphiwe Nyanda. The
paper apologised to Minister Nyanda for a story alleging intended
corruption in the suspension of his Director General. The story had
been based on a single unnamed source, and the newspaper's apology
conceded that this was "shoddy" journalism.
Bruce (or is it the renewed call for a media tribunal?) seems to have
triggered a fashion for apologies. The very next day, The Times carried
its own rather half-hearted apology (but an apology nonetheless) for
having run a story on Monday headlined "Jail journalists - Nzimande".
The newspaper conceded that our General Secretary had not said this at
the SACP's 89th anniversary rally in Rustenburg.
But that wasn't the end of the story. While The Times was busying being
apologetic on Tuesday, the Business Day, having done its apologetic
thing on Monday, was now running an editorial attacking cde Nzimande
for "getting so excited at the prospect of sending a journalist to
jail". Presumably this editorial claim was based on a single source
once more - in this case, the erroneous story in The Times!
Media stories, especially sensational allegations about prominent
personalities, have legs of their own. Saying sorry after the event is
just not good enough. Sorry doesn't undo the damage, whether the sorry
is prominently displayed or obscurely tucked away.
Clearly, we've got a problem. In fact, we've got several media
problems. Part of the confusion in the debate around the proposed media
tribunal is that ALL of these problems tend to be lumped together. The
tribunal is presented either as a solution to them all, or as a
sinister non-solution.
It would be wrong to see a tribunal as the solution to all media
problems. For instance, within the ANC-led alliance there is
considerable frustration with the fact that much of the print media, in
particular, appears to have adopted a narrowly anti-ANC oppositionist
stance. Remember the orgiastic media froth at the launch of COPE?
Notice how stories about the SACP and COSATU are all too often anchored
around the forlorn but endlessly repeated conviction that we will split
from the ANC. These are irritations for us, but they are not the kind
of thing that could or should be sorted out in a tribunal.
Related to this oppositionist inclination is the media's view that it
is a watch-dog over those in power (usually those in political rather
than economic power). The media certainly needs to play a watch-dog
role. There are many examples before and after 1994 of journalists
exposing wrong-doing in high places and we should salute those who have
done so. However, there are times when watch-dog zealotry displaces
other roles of the media - like helping ordinary citizens with accurate
information on matters that affect their daily lives. But, again, the
question of getting this balance right is not really a matter for a
tribunal - except where there are spurious and ungrounded allegations
masquerading as blowing the whistle.
Another big problem is the ownership of media. Two major corporations
dominate the newspaper business - the Independent Newspaper group and
Media24/Naspers. One recent attempt to break this monopoly, the
Nigerian-financed This Day soon became...well, Yesterday. It was
marginalised not on the basis of its editorial content, but because the
two big corporations dominate everything from paper supplies to
distribution networks. This might be something that the Competition
Commission could consider but, again, it is not properly a matter for
the proposed tribunal.
There is another problem with the Independent Group. It is
foreign-owned and while its local papers are turning a profit, its
foreign newspapers are in serious trouble. According to many
journalists working on so-called "Independent" newspapers in SA,
surplus from SA is being pumped out to prop up failing titles
elsewhere. Newsrooms are being squeezed locally. Experienced
journalists are being retrenched and junior journalists are being
deployed to cover stories for which they are ill equipped. Again, while
these dynamics are no doubt partly responsible for the grievous
inaccuracies that often occur, the question of media ownership as such
is not a matter for a tribunal. The democratisation of the media and
the fostering of a diversity of voices is a battle to be fought on
other terrains.
Writing in Sunday's City Press, in his capacity as a freshly
appointed "in-house ombudsman" (another too-little, too-late
self-regulatory move?), Mathatha Tsedu, quite candidly concedes that
Media24's ownership transformation exercise has been a "joke". However,
he assures us that ownership personalities are largely irrelevant, it
is the editorial staff that determine content. All that the effective
Media24 owners worry about, he tells us, is making a profit - "if the
target market is lapping the newspaper off the stands, they let the
content managers be."
But, contrary to what Tsedu appears to assume, this is NOT reassuring
at all. If editorial "independence" swings on profit maximisation, then
we will tend to get exactly what we are often getting. Trashy tabloids
aimed at the working class, and acres of middle-class whingeing in what
passes for serious journalism. In short, journalism that panders to the
lowest common denominator in its target audience.
Let me stress that these are tendencies, not the whole picture. There
are many positive features in our media. There are thoughtful
commentators and plenty of professional journalists. There is much
lively public phone-in participation on our radio stations and an
impressive array of local community broadcasters.
So why do we need to consider having an independent media tribunal?
It should certainly not be about taming the media into being docile
lap-dogs for the ruling party or government. We cannot go back to that
pre-1994 past. Nor should it be about getting even with individual
journalists, still less packing people off to jail. The stories of an
individual journalist are seldom simply his or her work alone - from a
collective news conference's allocation of assignments, through a
sub-editor's dodgy headline, to the general ambience of competitive and
money-making pressures, what appears as an individual story in the
media is essentially a collective, institutional product. If a tribunal
is to have some teeth - say the levying of fines - then these should be
imposed on the business and not the individual.
We DO need a reliable and independent institutional mechanism to which
members of the public, including (but not only) high-profile
personalities, can take concerns around grievous misrepresentation and
unethical reporting. So what about the courts? Civil action against
libel needs, of course, to be an option, but it is costly, prolonged
and often inconclusive. Won't the independence of a tribunal appointed
by and reporting to parliament run the risk of being compromised by a
dominant majority party? It's possible, but I believe that the example
of our Human Rights Commission and latterly of the Public Protector
demonstrate a different trajectory.
One thing's for sure, as this week's carnival of newspaper apologies
demonstrates - self-regulation on its own simply isn't working.
Asikhulume!!


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Posted By DomzaNet to Communist University on 8/04/2010 11:21:00 AM

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