Daily Sun (November 22 2013) - THIS is a picture which some people say should not be on Page One of Daily Sun. It shows the bloodied body of a man beaten to death for trying to break into a shack, and then dragged into the road as a warning to other criminals. IT HAPPENED IN KHAYELITSHA, CAPE TOWN, WHERE KILLING IS RIFE.
This week, Daily Sun was censured by the Press Ombudsman for two instances of publishing pictures of corpses on Page One. He ruled that we should print a front-page apology (see here).
The Ombudsman was responding to complaints from people, including government officials, who were offended by the depiction of violent death in the People's Paper and would rather it was forbidden - or at least tucked out of sight. The Press Code says newspapers must exercise "due care and responsibility . . . with regards to the presentation of brutality, violence and suffering."
Daily Sun sticks to our contention that publication of these admittedly shocking pictures - including the one today - serves an important public purpose to alert society to the perils of daily life in our poorest areas.
There are people who would rather read about e-tolls and Beyonce and turn a blind eye to the violence in our midst. But our readers tell us daily that little or nothing is being done to halt the rampage of criminals through their kasis and bring them to justice. In Khayelitsha yesterday, where this 30-year-old man was beaten to death by an angry mob, residents of UT squatter camp in Site B said they were fed up with the ineffective police presence.
Said one woman: "These thugs are young kids who are addicted to drugs and rob people. Will the cops come after hours when we are being robbed in the dark?"