Letter from South Africa

One Sunday evening, a political correspondent was interviewing a local politician in a regional television studio. An angry rival burst in, abusing the interviewee and brining the programme to a halt, while a heavily-armed mob of his supporters clashed with security personnel at the front door. Sout...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Christopher Merrett
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ISC Collective 1994-12-01
Series:Information for Social Change
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4603890
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author Christopher Merrett
author_facet Christopher Merrett
author_sort Christopher Merrett
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description One Sunday evening, a political correspondent was interviewing a local politician in a regional television studio. An angry rival burst in, abusing the interviewee and brining the programme to a halt, while a heavily-armed mob of his supporters clashed with security personnel at the front door. South Africa is very much the world's favourite nation at present, a paragon of international virtue providing rhetorical fodder from Westminster Abbey to the White House lawn. It has an excellent new constitution containing a Bill of Rights promising freedom of expression, association and information. But these are just words on paper when a minister can terminate a broadcast and have his lame excuse (that he thought the programme was finished) accepted by his cabinet colleagues. The whole episode has been quietly brushed under the carpet in spite of public outrage from the South African Broadcasting Corporation, political parties (all of them except the pro-apartheid Conservative party and, of course, Inkatha) and human rights groups. It would appear that the freedoms, both proactive and protective, launched with great fanfare, in April can be arbitrarily kicked aside by a politician with a grievance. The fact that this is a good old tradition - broadcasters in the apartheid years routinely took orders from Cabinet ministers - says little for democracy in the new South Africa.
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spelling doaj.art-751d0f4fd6da480890a8b49a4863ea642022-12-21T21:55:59ZengISC CollectiveInformation for Social Change1364-694X1756-901X1994-12-011323310.5281/zenodo.4603890Letter from South AfricaChristopher MerrettOne Sunday evening, a political correspondent was interviewing a local politician in a regional television studio. An angry rival burst in, abusing the interviewee and brining the programme to a halt, while a heavily-armed mob of his supporters clashed with security personnel at the front door. South Africa is very much the world's favourite nation at present, a paragon of international virtue providing rhetorical fodder from Westminster Abbey to the White House lawn. It has an excellent new constitution containing a Bill of Rights promising freedom of expression, association and information. But these are just words on paper when a minister can terminate a broadcast and have his lame excuse (that he thought the programme was finished) accepted by his cabinet colleagues. The whole episode has been quietly brushed under the carpet in spite of public outrage from the South African Broadcasting Corporation, political parties (all of them except the pro-apartheid Conservative party and, of course, Inkatha) and human rights groups. It would appear that the freedoms, both proactive and protective, launched with great fanfare, in April can be arbitrarily kicked aside by a politician with a grievance. The fact that this is a good old tradition - broadcasters in the apartheid years routinely took orders from Cabinet ministers - says little for democracy in the new South Africa.https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4603890south africasouth african constitutionbill of rightsfreedom of expressionfreedom of informationsouth african broadcasting corporationsouth african conservative partyinkathahuman rightsdemocracy in south africa
spellingShingle Christopher Merrett
Letter from South Africa
Information for Social Change
south africa
south african constitution
bill of rights
freedom of expression
freedom of information
south african broadcasting corporation
south african conservative party
inkatha
human rights
democracy in south africa
title Letter from South Africa
title_full Letter from South Africa
title_fullStr Letter from South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Letter from South Africa
title_short Letter from South Africa
title_sort letter from south africa
topic south africa
south african constitution
bill of rights
freedom of expression
freedom of information
south african broadcasting corporation
south african conservative party
inkatha
human rights
democracy in south africa
url https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4603890
work_keys_str_mv AT christophermerrett letterfromsouthafrica