EFF rubbishes ANC's request for more #SABC coverage

EFF Gauteng chairwoman Mandisa Mashego and party spokesman Mbuyiseni Ndlozi make submissions alleging editorial interference at theSABC. Picture: Getrude Makhafola / African News Agency (ANA)
Johannesburg
- The African National Congress (ANC) should not be given airtime if it has
nothing new to say, the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) told an inquiry looking
into allegations of editorial interference at the SABC in Johannesburg.
EFF
spokesman Mbuyiseni Ndlozi told inquiry chairman Joe Thloloe on Monday that
news should not be handled like advertising.
"For
example, the President [Cyril Ramaphosa] might do his morning walks, and you
tell me everyday about the walks? That is not news... I cannot wake up to that
everyday and that this time he is walking in Khayelitsha...that is no longer
news," said Ndlozi.
Last
week, the ANC's Zizi Kodwa told the inquiry that the governing party should be
allocated a 60 percent coverage compared to other parties. Ndlozi said the
proposal was biased.
“It
is such attitude that points to arrogance and entitlement, coming from a person
who is not even a member of Parliament. It boils down to marketing of a
political party, not news. Something is not news worthy only because it has 60
percent or 1 percent representation in Parliament," Ndlozi said.
"If
news should be fair, balanced and critical, it cannot use proportional representation.
News must remain in the orbit of journalism...a journalist goes out to seek the
truth, not a 60 percent news coverage for the ANC."
He
said that as a new political party, the EFF was being marginalised at the SABC,
more especially before and during the 2014 general elections.
"When
former head of news Jimmy Matthews left the SABC, he publicly stated that a
decision was taken to block EFF coverage. When other media such as the eNCA,
Al- Jazeera and Son invited the EFF to speak at their platforms, the ANC saw
EFF as a nuisance, and banned the CIC [commander-in-chief] Julius Malema and
the EFF, as said by Matthews...we cannot be discriminated against because we're
seen as a nuisance."
Matthews
conformed to censoring the EFF while he was at the public broadcaster, and that
he took the decision, but not alone. Instructions came from the former
disgraced chief operating officer Hlaudi Motsoeneng, who along with certain
individuals in the ANC, were of the view that Malema should not be given
coverage, Matthews said in an interview.
Thloloe
asked Ndlozi if there was any evidence that showed the ANC "called the
shots at the "SABC".
Ndlozi
responded that he doubted there was anything on paper or a recording to prove
such interference by the governing party and some SABC editors.
"That
is why I think you could be setting yourself [up] for failure. This was done in
a way that it ought not to leave a trace...it is not even an ANC
resolution...but Matthews' explicit statement proved that. One way to get to
the bottom of it is through confessions by those in the higher echelons at the
SABC, because it is very difficult to get people to reveal such
information."
He
advised Thloloe to invite Matthews to the inquiry.
Ndlozi
said EFF news coverage at the SABC improved in 2016, including during the local
government elections.
The
SABC established the inquiry as it set itself on a path to cleanse itself of
its scandalous past few years during the tenure of former communications
minister Faith Muthambi, Motsoeneng and the previous board.
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