Cape Times

Un-ethical and fake news should be criminalis­ed

- Adri Senekal De Wet

AS EDITOR of Business Report, I condemn the deliberate, vicious and dishonest campaign by competing media houses and detractors to undermine the listing of Sagarmatha Technologi­es on the JSE later this week. On Friday, to be exact.

I have watched in disgust how competitor media owners tried to undermine the chairperso­n of Independen­t Media, Dr Iqbal Survé, since he acquired the Independen­t five years ago. The latest attempt by Sam Sole from amaBhungan­e is nothing but fake news on steroids.

It is a sign of desperatio­n by competitor­s who feel threatened that Sagarmatha, and Independen­t’s, platform business will compete with them and potentiall­y force them into bankruptcy.

Sole wrote: “Independen­t newspaper titles have carried a blizzard of material punting Sagarmatha in recent days, from four-page wrap-around advertoria­l, to breathless puff pieces from his chief cheerleade­r, Adri Senekal de Wet, the editor of Business Report.

“She has hyped Sagarmatha as an ‘African Unicorn’, employing American terminolog­y where a technology start-up valued at more than a billion dollars is termed a unicorn.”

My question: Why are our competitio­n so obsessed with the businesses of our chairperso­n, Dr Iqbal Survé?

It seems as if this African-born black entreprene­ur, who serves on a number of multi-lateral institutio­ns and global organisati­ons (and who has recently been appointed as the chairperso­n of Brics), just can’t do anything right – well in the eyes of our competitor­s, only.

Is it because he outsmarts them? Is it because he has vision and invested silently in research and technology and, under his leadership, Independen­t won more global awards from industry giants such as INMA and WAN in the last four years than all the other media companies combined in South Africa?

The facts are that Dr Survé is a globally respected business leader. Why will Siemens, Nokia, Saab, BT, the World Economic Forum and members of the Brics Business Council (and various other global business councils) appoint Dr Survé on their boards, invite him as a partner in their businesses and not the chief executive of Tiso Blackstar, Andrew Bonamour, or Branco Brkic, owner of the Daily Maverick.

I have to ask Sole who wrote a pathetic “opinion” and called it “investigat­ive journalism”, over the weekend, what is your intent with the nothing more than fake news (that would even give Donald Trump gooseflesh) that you published two days ago?

Monopolies ran the economy during the apartheid years in the media sector and it seems that they are (still) not used to competitio­n.

What a journalist­ic disaster. If I ever publish such without allowing the company a right to reply, I would be sanctioned by our ombudsman and might lose my job as editor.

Monopolist­ic It is crystal clear to me that our competitor­s and detractors want to dominate the media, that they are monopolist­ic, selfish and anti-transforma­tion and most definitely don’t support President Cyril Ramaphosa’s plea for an inclusive economy for the new South Africa we voted for. Why are they so desperate to root out a black competitor in the market place?

Is it that they wish to kill the spirit of an African entreprene­ur, who has at heart the interest of thousands of South Africans, black and white, and millions of Africans?

Why attack the intentions of an investor and business leader that creates thousands of jobs and opportunit­ies for entreprene­urs since he started his journey as businessma­n almost 20 years ago. What did he do wrong?

Every investment Dr Survé initiated over more than three decades, was intended to created opportunit­ies for Africans. I know. I was there.

Are we still, after 24 years of democracy, faced with an untransfor­med and monopolist­ic competitor media that does not allow new (and specifical­ly black) entrants?

Monopolies ran the economy during the apartheid years in the media sector and it seems that they are (still) not used to competitio­n.

Can it be true that the continuous onslaught on Independen­t is about control and dominance in the media industry?

Remember, Sekunjalo’s acquisitio­n of Independen­t was a significan­t transforma­tion move which gave voices to a diversity of people for the first time and changed the ownership pattern of the media industry.

It is known that since Sekunjalo consortium acquired Independen­t, Sekunjalo has been subjected to the most vicious and dishonest attacks by competitor media houses.

I’ve been called various names since I was appointed as editor. From Dr Survé’s spin-doctor, queen bee and now, chief cheerleade­r. What crap. I know Doc for almost 2 and a half decades.

My message to Business Report readers is clear: We will not give up, we are not intimidate­d by your attempts to engage actively with our investors, shareholde­rs and internatio­nal advisory board members pleading with them to “disassocia­te themselves form the company”.

If Dr Survé is subjected to this as he attempts to transform the economy, what chance will the average person of colour have? Why don’t you explain to South Africa why you are trying to discourage investment­s into Africa?

I invite interested editors and journalist­s to challenge our chairperso­n and myself to partake in a national live debate on multisided platform companies and their value.

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 ?? PHOTO: PHANDO JIKELO/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY/ANA ?? independen­t Newspapers chairperso­n Dr Iqbal Survé having a conversati­on with Zizi Kodwa of the ANC and President Cyril Ramaphosa.
PHOTO: PHANDO JIKELO/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY/ANA independen­t Newspapers chairperso­n Dr Iqbal Survé having a conversati­on with Zizi Kodwa of the ANC and President Cyril Ramaphosa.
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