Media release by Dan Plato, Western Cape MEC of Community Safety: Unlawful police detainment of journalists must stop immediately
06 Feb 2014
Following reports in this morning's media that a journalist was unlawfully detained, threatened with arrest, and intimidated by South African police officers earlier this week, I will be asking the Independent Police Investigative Directorate (IPID) for a full investigation into the matter.
The report in the Daily Sun alleges that one of their journalists, while covering the scene of a vigilante attack in Phillipi on Tuesday, took photographs of policemen allegedly taking photos of the seriously injured victim with their cell phones instead of providing him with assistance.
The journalist claims that he heard the officers saying that they were going to post the photos on Facebook. If this is true then the police officers have violated the victim's dignity by taking photos for fun social media purposes and not to support any type of investigation.
When the officers saw the journalist taking pictures of them they allegedly put him in the back of a police van and held him at the Nyanga police station for two hours. The journalist also alleges that the officers tried to make him delete his pictures, and threatened to arrest him for attempted murder. If true, this kind of behaviour is totally unacceptable. A growing number of journalists across the country have been arrested or assaulted by the police while doing their job, which has serious implications for our freedom of the press.