The ongoing treatment of the private life of the President of the Republic, Cde Kgalema Montlanthe, will perhaps go down in South African media history as the beginnings of its 'tabloidisation' and, much more seriously, the erosion of whatever credibility it still had. This dirty delving into the private life of the President, and the use of a clearly discredited, if not emotionally unstable, source constitutes reckless and highly irresponsible journalism. It is a race to the shameful bottom! In fact this is a very serious abuse of press freedom, something that should ordinarily be of concern and offend the common sensibilities of all decent South Africans.
However, since there seems to be no outrage at this, as there seems to be a new media practice gaining ground in South Africa. This new media practice, perfected through the public persecution and maligning of the President of the ANC, Cde Jacob Zuma, is that it is an acceptable habit to dig into whatever 'dirt' and to fabricate smears against leaders of the ANC and the Alliance. In essence freedom of the press now means freedom to attack ANC leaders, almost without any limits. No similar digging is directed at all those leaders in the Opposition - not that digging into people's private lives is something that should be done on anyone.
Media 'sources' have now become anyone willing to make any allegation against ANC leaders. Without bothering to double check the credibility of these sources and their political or personal agendas, journalists are happy to use them as long as that would cast doubt on the integrity of ANC leadership. How else does one explain using a young woman as a source, but denies all she has said before? To add insult to injury, the media gets her surname wrong! I suppose, just like under apartheid, 'black surnames are not real surnames, as they are not in the dominant languages of South African print media'!
In the midst of all this, media oversight bodies are suspiciously silent about this very serious abuse of media freedom. This is not surprising; as some of us have consistently been saying that these oversight bodies are toothless as they are themselves part of the very same media they are supposed to judge impartially, including the inadequacy of penalties meted out to media outlets found to have lied or violated the rights of those unfairly covered.
Why is it that the Press Ombuds or SANEF, for instance, have not proactively taken up this issue, and condemn the editor and journalist involved for this flagrantly irresponsible journalism? Part of the problem, it would seem, is that unless a complaint is lodged, these institutions take no proactive action on their part. Where are the Anton Harbers, Franz Krugers and Guy Bergers? At the very least we would have expected an initiation of a public debate about the role of media in this whole fiasco.
Whilst most of media has been complicit in this, the Independent Group of newspapers should be particularly ashamed about this whole episode. When the political editorial team of the Independent Group publicly pronounced that it will cover the elections fairly, we rightly poured cold water on this commitment, and we are being proved right!