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MISA launches annual state of media freedom report
Media Institute of Southern
Africa
May 02, 2012
The Media Institute
of Southern Africa (MISA) has launched its annual state of media
freedom report, So This
is Democracy? The launch is designed to coincide with the occasion
of World Press Freedom Day, falling on May 3.
The current
edition of So This Is Democracy? (Number 18) documents numerous
media freedom and freedom of expression violations that MISA recorded
in Southern Africa during the course of 2011. Of interest to journalists,
media practitioners and media activists will be the two key observations
MISA makes based on the analyses contained in this report.
According to
MISA: "as the strategies of beating journalists to a pulp,
kidnapping or killing them or bombing printing presses lose their
appeal in the region, the future of media repression will rely greatly
on the threat of legal action against journalists or media houses.
[Hence], as long as media law reform agenda is held back, the more
repressive governments will use outdated laws and the inherent colonial
instruments of repression that come with such, to restrict media
freedom and media growth in the region."
Most of the
country reports in the 2011 edition of So this is Democracy? note
that the existence of archaic laws is fundamentally threatening
media freedom as such laws are open to abuse, based on level of
interpretation.
MISA also makes
the observation that "within the self-regulatory framework
of the media, those who sit in Media/Press Councils/Tribunals will
have to create some critical distance between themselves and the
media they regulate in order to gain confidence from both the public
and those who criticize them, mostly politicians.
The self-regulatory
image currently being portrayed by various Media/Press Councils/Tribunals
in the region is that they are closely-linked, if not part of, the
media institutions they watch over and therefore cannot inspire
public confidence because of the question marks placed on their
credibility given these seemingly intrinsic links.
On the other
hand, political oversight of the media remains undesirable and must
be resisted - at all costs!"
Quite prominent
in the debate on media regulation is South Africa, which is now
considering a new and different form altogether of regulation as
recommended by the Press Freedom Commission, an independent body
set up by the South African National Editors Forum (SANEF) and Print
Media South Africa (PMSA) to carry out research and come up with
recommendations on the ideal regulatory framework for print media
in South Africa.
The ruling African
National Congress (ANC) had mooted radical reforms for print media
in South Africa and couched these in the proposal to introduce a
Media Appeals Tribunal (MAT), which would have meant that there
would exist statutory control of the media in South Africa. However,
the media and civil society vigorously fought against these proposals.
Other issues
emerging in the report are related to access to and freedom of information.
A pattern of governments reneging on their pledges to promote access
to information is clear in the report. MISA is at the centre of
a campaign on access to information - the African Platform
on Access to Information (APAI) - and seeks to advocate for
legislation that allows citizens to freely access public information
in a bid to foster public accountability. Although laws that, purportedly,
seek to promote access to information, it has been recorded that
such laws actually hinder the same and are inconsistent with the
letter and spirit in which they were envisioned.
So This is Democracy?
will be launched by MISA Chapters across the SADC region on May
3, 2012. Its publication as result of the critical media freedom
monitoring and research function, which is at the core of MISA's
work throughout Southern Africa and closely-linked with decisive
action, both in terms of practical support to journalists and media
policy advocacy.
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the MISA fact
sheet
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