SA MEDIA OFF THE MARK ON PROPOSED MEDIA TRIBUNAL
The response by the South African National Editors Forum (SANEF) and journalists on the proposed Media Appeals Tribunal and a discussion paper for the ANC National General Council on media transformation confirms the need for the establishment of such an institution in the country. The media has opted for a dismissive, hypodermic approach instead of an objective debate around the Media Appeals Tribunal proposal.
This approach undermines the ethos from which the media should operate in, that of being a facilitator in a public sphere where there is un-mediated flow of information and ideas. In a public sphere the media is and should play the facilitator role of information of which the citizenry use to make up their own minds about particular issues or topic raised in the public sphere.
Sadly SANEF has resorted to a defense mode mechanism and launched scathing attacks on the ANC by decrying the proposal and comparing it to restrictive apartheid laws. As expected opposition parties, political commentators have joined in to declare this unconstitutional and an infringement on media freedom in the country.
While it can be accepted for the media to protect their freedom, the proposed tribunal doesn't at any given stage threaten media freedom or freedom of expression in this country, instead it proposes punitive measures for defamatory articles, transformation in the media industry and media ownership.
The draft proposal acknowledges the black ownership in some media houses like Avusa and Media 24 and decries lack of ownership in some media companies like Independent News. Interestingly though, the ownership of few shares by black people(25.5 % percent Avusa, 15.5 Media 24, 50.0 % Primedia) has not been translated to change in the way news are covered in the country.