Mpumelelo mkhabela biography of george
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South Africa: Government threats as media get their act together
Franz Krüger
Along with the rest of the world, South Africa’s media have faced enormous economic and technological pressures, but what sets them apart is the overriding influence of political pressure, which has shaped the media landscape and the form of media regulation in particular.
The coming of democracy to South Africa 20 years ago placed the media on the agenda for transformation. Broadcasting was extensively restructured, with attempts made to turn the SA Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) from a mouthpiece of the apartheid state into a genuine public broadcaster. At the same time, space opened up for private commercial and community broadcasters, which have become important players with growing audiences.
Calls for the transformation of the private print media focused on demands to make the community of owners and editors more demographically representative of the population, and to eradicate all vestiges of racism in the news.
Addressing editors in 1997, Nelson Mandela said: “Whatever measures have been taken, the truth is that the media is still in the control of the whites, and in many cases conservative whites, who are unable to reflect the aspirations of the majority.”
This kind of criticism was
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Heartbreaking story of Selebi
A FEW years ago I asked Jackie Selebi, then police commissioner, how he planned to deal with corruption in the police force.
Our discussion took place on the sidelines of an Interpol meeting in Cape Town, convened to cobble together a global anti-terrorism strategy.
At the time US President George W Bush had compelled all nations to join his "war on terror".
In the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks in the US, world police chiefs were tasked with drafting anti-terror action manuals. Selebi was firmly at the helm of Interpol.
He had secured an influential position as the head of the international anti-crime unit - a body whose confidence in him appeared resolute even when evidence about his misdemeanours would later warrant grave suspicion.
As head of the police service he enjoyed absolute loyalty from his subordinates. Allegations of corruption against him had not yet surfaced. Nor could anyone have imagined them. Not as a figment of the imagination. Not as a joke.
He was, to borrow a phrase from Luthuli House, a cop in good standing. This made it easy for President Thabo Mbeki's administration to back his ascendency to Interpol.
Responding to my question about police corruption, Selebi quibbled along these lines