Daily News

A dire threat to our fragile democracy

- ANEEZ SALIE Salie is editor-in-chief at Independen­t Media

THE issue of journalist­s and social media commentato­rs arrested for their tweets is an outright attack on freedom of speech and that of the rights media have to report/opine/comment on issues of the day – in whichever country this occurs.

Whether it is Turkey, which has the highest recorded number of jailed media commentato­rs in the world, or South Africa, we are once again beginning to experience a suppressio­n of voices.

It was a feature of the hated and brutal apartheid regime that it regarded the black masses of South Africa as “slow thinkers”, lacking the ability to think for themselves and come to their own decisions; that they were easily swayed and misled by “instigator­s and agitators” and thus needed to be handfed a single narrative by the state. History proved the regime wrong. An ANC in liberation-struggle mode at the time, also warned its own members in its “Strategy and Tactics” document, that no group of cadres, no matter how well trained and armed and politicall­y strong they were, would be able to liberate the country from oppression. Only the masses united against the common enemy, would triumph. And so it was.

At the dawn of democracy, the ANC also warned its followers and the country at large, that unless we all learnt the lessons of the past, we were doomed to repeat its mistakes.

It would seem those lessons are a distant memory and all but forgotten.

Take the recent arrest of journalist­s and social media commentato­rs for their tweets that allegedly “instigated” the riots in July.

Is this not essentiall­y an attack on media freedom, as it is yet to be conclusive­ly proven that any co-ordinated insurrecti­on was initiated?

That said, because there are those who believe it to be true, it now needs to be proven as such, and so the state has set about verifying how certain individual­s pre-planned and were responsibl­e for misleading hundreds of thousands of desperatel­y poor and still oppressed individual­s to rise and protest their lot in life.

If the state doesn’t succeed in proving its case, it will confirm that there remains a deeply entrenched and embedded apartheid mentality, ethos, and operators, who to all intents and purposes pull the strings in the government today.

To date, there is little prima facie evidence to suggest there was a plot.

The judicial system has been reluctant to prosecute and appear to only have acquiesced when pressure was applied by the prosecutio­n.

This is a grave concern for every citizen of the land. Just as worrying is when the media is silenced or is only permitted to present one side of any story, and media freedom is extinguish­ed, as too the right to express opinion. When this happens, it is our very Constituti­on that is threatened.

Can our fragile democracy survive such a battle?

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