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Special Rapporteur concerned over safety of journalists in Africa
Media Institute of Southern
Africa
November 01, 2012
http://www.misa.org/index.php/featured-news/item/490-advocate-pansy-tlakula-concerned-over-safety-of-journalists-in-africa
The safety of journalists must be tackled effectively or journalists
would start practising self-censorship, advocate Pansy Tlakula,
chairperson of the Electoral Commission, said yesterday.
Tlakula was
speaking at Wits University, where she gave the inaugural Carlos
Cardoso Memorial Lecture at the African Investigative Journalism
Conference.
Tlakula called
on schools of journalism and media houses to tackle the issue of
the safety of journalists in order to avoid "self-censorship
becoming the order of the day".
"I don't
see media houses paying attention to the issue of journalists' safety."
Tlakula, who
is a Special Rapporteur on freedom of expression in the African
Commission for Human and People's Rights, said 110 journalists had
died in the line of duty in 2012. Of these, 27 were in Africa. Somalia
was "one of the deadliest places for a journalist".
In several African
countries, oppressive laws regarding freedom of expression still
existed.
These laws made
defamation a criminal offence punishable by fines and jail sentences,
and could include the suspension of the publication concerned.
In these cases,
journalists could be charged with defamation even if what they published
was true.
Tlakula called
on everyone to support the campaign to "rid our continent of
these unreasonable laws".
She called on
the public to "keep on fighting for the inclusion of the public
interest defence clause in the secrecy bill, "because without
that defence, the right to freedom of expression may be compromised . . . ".
While South
Africa had strong access to information laws, their implementation
remained a challenge.
Only 10 countries
in Africa had adopted access to information laws.
That had led
the commission to develop model access to information laws to help
other African countries develop their own.
Tlakula said
the plight of journalists in Africa was "keeping me awake,
trying to keep people out of jail".
The UN had recognised
the importance of safety of journalists and had passed a resolution
in this regard in 2012.
"Sadly
these high-level interventions have not improved the situation of
journalists on the ground."
She referred
to the bravery of Mozambican journalists Carlos Cardoso, who had
been assassinated in 2000 while investigating massive fraud at the
country's largest bank and implicating leading political figures
and their families.
She said Cardoso
would have died in vain if governments continued to ignore their
regional and international obligations and continued to impede the
freedom of expression and access to information with oppressive
laws.
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