Mpumelelo 'It does not get any worse' Mkhabela and challenges for South African media
Earlier this year the Deputy Press Ombudsman delivered what maybe regarded as the harshest judgment ever against a newspaper and its editor thus far in the history of the establishment of the Press Ombuds. The judgement ordered the Sowetan to apologise to the person of the General Secretary of the SACP, who in his capacity as Minister of Higher Education and Training, had one of his speeches not only misrepresented but also seriously distorted.
Amongst other things, the ruling of the Press Ombuds said:
"This is the most unethical comment that I can recall after having dealt with approximately 500 complaints in this office. Let me repeat: I cannot recall ever having seen irresponsible journalism on such an ugly scale as this. It does not get any worse".
What is serious about this is that this is not just a transgression by an ordinary journalist, but by an editor of one of the largest newspapers in our country. As a matter of fact if South African media follows to the letter the standards by which they seek to hold everybody else in society, such a serious finding actually calls for the editor to be fired! It is indeed very sad that a title with such a history like the Sowetan can be reduced to this. Remember it was the same paper that opportunistically and distastefully published pictures of two security officers having sex and to meekly apologize later.
The editor of the Sowetan, one Mpumelelo Mkhabela, instead of carrying out the sanction meted out by the Ombudsman, he unashamedly, through a completely incomprehensible statement, sought to buy time and requested leave to appeal. The application was denied on the basis that there was no grounds the Press Council Appeals Panel could rule any differently from the Deputy Press Ombudsman.