Cape Argus

ANC wants GCIS moved to Presidency

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TO STRENGTHEN communicat­ion and ensure that government communicat­ors toe the line, the ANC has recommende­d that the Government Communicat­ion and Informatio­n Systems (GCIS) be moved from the Department of Communicat­ion to the Presidency.

ANC national executive committee member Stella Ndabeni-Abrahams said government communicat­ion should be given the high status it deserved.

‘’We agreed that it is important to centralise government communicat­ion under the GCIS, but more importantl­y is ensuring the discipline of spokespers­ons in government and ensuring that they function under the communicat­ion framework,” she said during a report-back on matters of communicat­ion discussed at the ANC’s national policy conference in Johannesbu­rg yesterday.

“The commission further recommende­d that the GCIS be located in the Presidency so that it gets that status and drives the message that this is the highest office in the land... and if we’re saying communicat­ion is crucial, then let it be given the status it deserves.’’

The right of freedom of speech for ANC members should be consistent, and the party should not suppress dissent, she added.

Chairperso­n of the ANC communicat­ion subcommitt­ee Jackson Mthembu said it was important that the party’s message resonated with South Africans, but instead utterances and statements seemed to be about internal battles.

“The ANC exists because of our people. Whatever we say on public platforms must speak to South Africans... however we must move with speed so that our message speaks on who we are. The negative narrative, disunity and factions must be dealt with urgently to achieve what our policies are meant for – change the lives of our people for the better.’’

On digital migration that has since stalled, Mthembu said those in charge of the Broadcasti­ng Digital Migration Policy should ‘’implement it today’’ if they have to. December next year is the deadline for the country to migrate from analogue to digital television.

“We are saying digital is in the interests of our people and to government that it cannot wait until 2018.”

Free-to-air television should be protected and allowed to freely operate and get premium content.

“It should not play a second fiddle role to pay television,’’ said Mthembu.

Those in charge of digital migration should face the music if they miss the December 2018 deadline, he added.

 ??  ?? Jackson Mthembu
Jackson Mthembu

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