CapeArgus.gif

 

 

Independent will operate by a new editorial charter

 

 

Karima Brown and Vukani Mde, Cape Argus, 27 January 2014

 

Dr Iqbal Survé and Sekunjalo, similar to anyone who acquires any private
company, have a right and obligation to their shareholders to make changes
as they see fit - even when the company in question is a newspaper group.
These may include changes to management, staff, the structure of the
business, its growth strategies and targets, and even its editorial
orientation.

 

The only obligation he owes to his editors is the assurance that within the
parameters of whatever that orientation is, they are free and unfettered to
run their papers as they see fit. He has given this assurance, and committed
to a new editorial charter that will define editors' rights, obligations and
accountability. Independent will be the first South African news group to
operate according to such a charter, adherence to which will be overseen by
an editorial advisory board of prominent and respected persons. 

 

So why has the takeover been accompanied by such unrelenting controversy and
endless resistance? 

 

In truth the controversies of the past few months are another demonstration
of the skewed patterns of power (economic, political, and discursive) in
South Africa 20 years into democracy.

 

A small but very privileged and racially definable minority still controls
the tools of public discourse, including the bulk of private commercial
media and virtually all the mainstream newspaper groups. The private
commercial media represents this minority's economic and political
interests, and presents their world view as the unchallengeable norm,
promoting their narrative of South Africa as the dominant, indeed the sole,
narrative. 

 

This group sees Sekunjalo's takeover as the biggest challenge to its
hegemony thus far, and the fight-back has predictably been vicious. They
have no reason to fear Andrew Bonamour's takeover of Times Media. They had
no problem with Tony O'Reilly's takeover of Independent, at least not until
the financial bloodletting started. 

 

But they do take issue with black control of any significant media asset,
particularly where control will pass to people they judge to be too close to
the ANC.

 

This group has resisted and fought against transformation of the media, be
it in ownership, management, or in newsrooms. They've grown adept at paying
lip service to the goals of transformation and media diversity, but in truth
remain against them, as their joint and individual actions demonstrate. In
two recent examples where ANC-linked black businesspeople have either bought
or founded mainstream media companies, the backlash from the
minority-controlled mainstream has been ferocious and tinged with racism. 

 

The New Age was pilloried and labelled, its brand destroyed before the
newspaper hit the streets, because its proprietors were open about wanting a
paper that was more "positive" about South Africa and wasn't intuitively
anti-government.

 

There's nothing wrong with these sentiments, and there's more than enough
space for at least one outlet that shares the ruling party's political
stance. But the mainstream commercial media, with no evidence painted it as
a "mouthpiece" and its proposed editorial stance inherently corrupt.

 

For his part Dr Survé, who wears his ANC heart on his sleeve, has been
portrayed as the worst anti-press freedom bogeyman. He was accused from the
get-go of leading a "government takeover" of the Independent group, or
alternatively a Chinese colonial takeover, or both.

 

Just as the sale of the group was to be concluded last August, the Mail &
Guardian, one of the leading platforms of the anti-Survé crusade, published
an outrageous story titled "Independent sale tightens media noose". 

 

Dripping with racial condescension and anti-Chinese propaganda, the piece
announced that the company "could find itself under the effective control of
the South African government and two mystery Chinese investors". 

 

No such fear of "effective government control" has ever been expressed
regarding the PIC's 20 percent investment in Times Media, publishers of the
Sunday Times (which has been tellingly quiet on the issue of the PIC's
Sekunjalo holding, despite its own anti-Survé stance). 

 

And the "mysterious" Chinese investors are the China Africa Development
Fund, an outfit so shady it held a public launch when it opened its Joburg
office in 2009, and has since taken up office space, complete with prominent
logos and signage, in Sandton Drive.

 

Moreover, the two investors together hold 45 percent of the company that now
owns Independent, with the remaining 55 percent controlling share held by
the Survé-led Sekunjalo. 

 

Yet the writers insisted that "the Chinese" had been "given controlling
powers", without explaining how this feat was achieved.

 

No journalist working in pursuit of the truth could actually believe such
drivel, but the M&G and its writers aren't driven by "journalism" when
"reporting" on Independent. Rather they are pursuing a relentless agenda of
disinformation and demonisation against a competitor whose expansion plans
they accurately read as a threat to themselves. 

 

The paper's anti-Survé campaign is so absurd that last week he was likened
to Hitler on its editor's Facebook wall. Dr Survé thankfully hasn't been
lured into the mudslinging, and instead this month quietly began an internal
conversation with staff at all levels about what sort of company they wish
to work for, and how to turn Independent into that company.

 

The campaign against Independent, while unsurprising from competitors who
tried and failed to buy some of our leading titles when the group was up for
sale, has also found diligent and willing allies inside the group. A small
cabal of powerful senior staffers, who also had ambitions to buy Independent
titles, has seemingly decided that they cannot and will not work with Dr
Survé. Quite why they should feel this way and whether their feelings are
justified, is irrelevant. What is interesting and remains to be answered by
them, is why they want to have their bread buttered on both sides.

 

They behave like people who have ethical, moral, professional or political
objections to the new Independent owner, and yet stubbornly remain in its
employ, drawing salaries from a proprietor to whom they object. That is not
the route of people acting on principle. We write as journalists who, when
faced with a similar situation, acted on principle. We left The New Age when
it became clear that we could not in good conscience work with the
proprietors, and our vision for the paper was not in accordance with theirs.

 

Aside from the sideshow of the Cape Times' unacceptable "coverage" of Nelson
Mandela's death, its then editor told her new boss, the man who owns the
paper, she "wouldn't work with him". 

 

How does any editor who says this imagine that situation will play out, and
is there anywhere else in the South African media where this would be
tolerated?

 

On December 5 , last year, this editor decided she would not strip the front
page to mark Nelson Mandela's passing and would run a story that in their
view was damaging to Sekunjalo, as their own "up-yours" message to Dr Survé.
Last week one of these staffers tried to justify this political power play,
in a piece published in the Cape Times, which ironically gives the lie to
her hysterical claims of "management interference" in the paper's editorial
space.

 

Since the editor's removal her allies and "activist" group Right2Know have
portrayed her removal as a "press freedom" issue, organising protests
outside the paper's offices. In moves that reveal their true motives, they
have attempted to mobilise advertisers against the Cape Times, and
threatened to organise the staff to down tools. These actions are calculated
to sabotage the paper they claim to be defending.

 

In the final analysis, no one is shackled to Independent or any of its
titles. Anyone who cannot bring themselves to accept its new owner or its
direction under him, must as a matter of principle leave, and give the rest
of us space to build the company we want to work for.

 

·        Vukani Mde is the group op-ed and analysis editor and Karima Brown
is the group executive editor

 

From:
http://www.hispanicbusiness.com/2014/1/27/independent_will_operate_by_a_new.
htm

 

 

 

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