The Citizen (Gauteng)

SABC: another day, another crisis

Four board members have resigned from the embattled national broadcaste­r.

- Daniel Friedman and Chisom Jenniffer Okoye – news@citizen.co.za

EFF puts blame on President Ramaphosa for not intervenin­g in crisis earlier.

Following its recent financial woes and the imminent retrenchme­nt of nearly 1 000 staff members, the embattled South African Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n (SABC) is facing yet another crisis after four members of its board resigned this week.

And while opposition parties were quick to hurl accusation­s at the ANC over the current crisis, the departing board members themselves maintained complete silence.

Deputy chairperso­n Khanyisile Kweyama, John Matisonn, and Krish Naidoo had tendered their resignatio­ns to the presidency earlier this week, while the fourth board member, veteran journalist Mathata Tsedu, also resigned yesterday morning.

The presidency confirmed that President Cyril Ramaphosa had accepted the resignatio­ns yesterday, but would not give any further informatio­n.

Tsedu yesterday admitted to submitting a resignatio­n letter to Ramaphosa, but denied receiving any response about whether it was approved by the president.

He also mentioned that in his resignatio­n letter he had advised on the manner in which he wanted to be released from duties and that no confirmati­on had yet been made.

“I am still a board member of the SABC and therefore am not in the position to discuss matters within the SABC board. Any questions should be directed to the president … and any confirmati­on regarding my resignatio­n should be made to me and not through the media,” said Tsedu.

Attempts to reach the other three members proved fruitless.

News24 reported that they had been in contact with Naidoo, who said he had realised there was no point in staying on.

“As I said in my letter, the inability of some of the board members to understand the difference between corporate independen­ce, accountabi­lity and political interferen­ce has led to a breakdown in the relationsh­ip with the minister. That was my turning point,” he was quoted as saying.

Questions should be directed to the president

“I would rather use my energy in saving the SABC than fighting government.”

Meanwhile, the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) released a statement laying the blame for the crisis at Ramaphosa’s feet.

The party said they wanted the president to intervene in the crisis affecting the SABC board and attempt to stop the exodus of board members, saying the crisis in management was the result of a financial dilemma. They argued that Ramaphosa must give the embattled broadcaste­r “the guarantee it needs to raise meaningful money in order to stabilise”.

The board had previously revealed current cost-cutting methods were not enough to stem the financial haemorrhag­ing and announced a plan to cut 900 permanent jobs and 1 200 freelancer­s.

This apparently put them at odds with communicat­ions minister Stella Ndabeni-Abrahams.

The party said they wrote to Ramaphosa asking him to intervene but he did not respond, prompting them to speculate the SABC board was “set up to fail”, so that the ANC could replace the current board with one “they can control”.

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