The Citizen (Gauteng)

SABC should not grovel

- Martin Williams DA city councillor in Johannesbu­rg

Dlamini-Zuma has been trying to create an impression of distance between herself and her ex. That is difficult because she has been happy to accept his endorsemen­t.

When an apology is over-stated, we should ask why. The SABC’s apology to Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma (NDZ for short) suggests the public broadcaste­r has chosen her side in the ANC leadership contest.

The corporatio­n committed two lapses, both blown out of proportion. First, someone writing TV-screen taglines omitted the first three letters of NDZ’s surname. So she was referred to as “Mini-Zuma”. Don’t laugh. Jokes are strictly forbidden.

This may not have been a deliberate mistake. Typographi­cal errors are the stock-intrade of the other Zupta channel, ANN7. These institutio­ns do not look for competence when recruiting editorial staff.

Another grievous sin was to refer to NDZ as an ex-wife (of you-know-who). Of course that was sexist and wrong. NDZ has held three ministeria­l posts and is former chair of the African Union Commission. She deserves recognitio­n in her own right. There is no harm in the SABC pointing this out.

However, SABC acting group chief executive officer Nomsa Philiso went overboard, saying the directors have “instructed news management to investigat­e the matter thoroughly and urgently in order to get to the bottom of it and ensure that the SABC remains non-partisan”.

SABC spin doctor Kaizer Kganyago was scolded by Philiso for pointing out the obvious: this is “silly season” in the build-up to the ANC elective conference. People in various camps are hypersensi­tive about perceived bias.

However, both Kganyago and Philiso are wrong to say the SABC is non-partisan. Despite brave attempts at profession­alism by some journalist­s, the corporatio­n has not shaken off the partisan stigma that comes from labouring under Hlaudi Motsoeneng and predecesso­rs such as Snuki Zikalala.

With Motsoeneng out of the building, there have been expectatio­ns about a new order at the SABC. In this context, the over-reaction by acting CEO Philiso is a sobering backward step. She is serving the interests of not-my-president Jacob Zuma and company.

Lately, NDZ has been trying to create an impression of distance between herself and her ex. That is difficult because she has been happy to accept his endorsemen­t, and to enjoy the taxpayer-funded services of the Presidenti­al Protection Service, to which she is not entitled.

The name Jacob Zuma is toxic for many reasons. Among those is associatio­n with the Guptas. But NDZ is not free of that connection. Obviously she is not as compromise­d as is Duduzane’s father. However, she did visit the Gupta family compound in 2010-2011. Indeed, a question asked in The Citizen in November last year is worth repeating, “What was Dlamini-Zuma doing at the Gupta shebeen in 2011?”

When she was home affairs minister, NDZ asked the Guptas to pay for a business-class ticket to South Africa for a Cameroonia­n reporter. The Guptas also bankrolled a competitio­n two years ago in which NDZ received R250 000 and was named “South African of the Year”.

NDZ’s attempts at stand-alone credibilit­y are further hampered by having the discredite­d Carl Niehaus as her spokespers­on and campaign manager. She cannot shake off her Zupta ties. Melodramat­ic apologies by the SABC won’t change that. We are not fooled.

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