The Citizen (Gauteng)

Court to rule on SABC’s freedom

STATES’ SWAY: GROUPS WANT LESS INTERFEREN­CE

- Ilse de Lange ilsed@citizen.co.za

Communicat­ions minister’s authority interferes with broadcaste­r’s decisions.

Judgment is expected later this week in the High Court in Pretoria in a legal bid by rights groups to curtail perceived political interferen­ce in the affairs of the SABC management.

The SOS: Support Public Broadcasti­ng Campaign; Media Monitoring Africa; and the Freedom of Expression Institute are seeking wide-ranging relief aimed at clipping the powers of the communicat­ions minister to hire and fire the top three executives of the public broadcaste­r.

They also want the court to set aside the removal of Ronnie Lubisi and Rachel Kalidass as board members.

The organisati­ons want the court to order that the executive members of the board must be appointed solely by the non-executive members and that only the board has the power to institute disciplina­ry proceeding­s and suspend the SABC’s top executives without approval of the minister.

They want to ensure that the post of executive director is advertised and that a transparen­t process of interviews is followed before the post is filled.

The applicants argued that the SABC had been beset by chronic problems of weak governance, mismanagem­ent and political interferen­ce for over a decade, which led most recently to the entire board having to resign and the National Assembly to appoint an interim board to run the broadcaste­r.

The applicants attacked the wide-ranging powers given to the minister by the SABC’s amended Memorandum of Incorporat­ion and the Board Charter as unconstitu­tional, breaching the Broadcasti­ng Act, and breaching the duties of the state to ensure the SABC’s independen­ce from government.

Communicat­ions Minister Ayanda Dlodlo insisted she had the right to remove the directors from office in terms of the Companies Act, but the applicants argued that their removal was regulated by the Broadcasti­ng Act and the directors could only be removed after a decision by the National Assembly.

The applicants stressed the importance of an independen­t public broadcaste­r as the overwhelmi­ng majority of citizens received their news and informatio­n primarily through the SABC’s broadcasts.

They argued there could be little public confidence in the SABC to investigat­e corruption and other misdeeds in government if it was subject to executive control. –

 ?? Picture: Rajesh Jantilal ?? Choristers from Prince Mshiyeni Choir from Umlazi perform during the 40th annual Old Mutual Choir Festival’s regional championsh­ip held at the Playhouse theatre in Durban yesterday.
Picture: Rajesh Jantilal Choristers from Prince Mshiyeni Choir from Umlazi perform during the 40th annual Old Mutual Choir Festival’s regional championsh­ip held at the Playhouse theatre in Durban yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa