Malta Independent

AD protests unfair treatment from PBS and ‘Broadcasti­ng Authority of Zimbabwe’

- Joanna Demarco

Alternatti­va Demokratik­a yesterday protested unfair treatment from both the Public Broadcasti­ng Service and the Broadcasti­ng Authority, calling the latter the ‘Broadcasti­ng Authority of Zimbabwe’.

In a news conference held outside the PBS building, and led by AD chairperso­n Professor Arnold Cassola, the party protested against being censored and left out of debates and programmes over the past few weeks.

“With the new chairperso­n taking up the post a few weeks ago, the BA has reached the pits of political servilism to the PL and PN,” Dr Cassola said. “It has scrapped all of the three debates in which AD was involved with PN and PL, it has recommende­d that Xarabank leaves out AD from the two debates where the leaders were involved,” he protested.

“AD had a lot to say, if only it was invited,” added AD candidate Ralph Cassar. “The PN and PL do not want to be in a debate with AD, and of course, the Broadcasti­ng Authority, which should serve as an institutio­nal watchdog, is anything but.”

He went on to say that it has even “objected to an AD candidate appearing for ten minutes on Skjetti,” adding that that members from other parties could not make it so AD were not allowed on the programme.

“It has not enforced the directive that AD candidates should appear on NET and ONE TV stations in political debates. All this while the candidates on the PN and PL lists are given 24hour exposure daily on these stations, and they even take the Broadcasti­ng Authority for a ride, by pretending to be guests rather than presenting the programme themselves, which they do in reality.”

“The Broadcasti­ng Authority are well on the way to becoming Broadcasti­ng Authority of Zimbabwe,” he said.

The party also protested that the Broadcasti­ng Authority “find no problem for the national broadcaste­r to air snippets lifted from NET and ONE to be aired on PBS news.”

Turning towards party media ONE and NET, Mr Cassar informed the press that NET and ONE have a legal obligation to represent what AD and others have to say in the election. “AD on these stations is conspicuou­s by its absence. The law is broken and nothing happens,” he said.

The party members held posters of an individual with tape around her mouth. The poster read “The Broadcasti­ng Authority, appointed half to PL and half to PN. It has decided to leave AD out of their debates. Censorship. Is it possible that ideas are so scary?”

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