Sowetan

Journo grilled in court while reporting on murder case

Request to photograph accused

- By Penwell Dlamini dlaminip@sowetan.co.za ■

Sowetan journalist Noxolo Sibiya was put on the stand at the Boksburg magistrate’s court to explain why she should take pictures of a man accused of killing his wife.

In a bizarre move yesterday, magistrate Ramafufi who is presiding over the murder trial of Mzwandile Mike Mphahlele asked Sibiya to explain why she should take pictures.

Sibiya spent 30 minutes on the witness stand being questioned by the defence and the state about her experience and why she needed to have Mphahele’s images.

She had covered the same case on Tuesday and submitted a written media applicatio­n to take pictures. Sibiya said as she arrived, court officials were calling her name.

“I was a confused. I thought that I was just going to read out the contents of the applicatio­n …But when I took the oath I realised it is serious. I was very nervous.”

She said the defence lawyer Amos Makhubela questioned her. “He asked why is it important now to have the picture when we have previously run stories without the image of the accused.”

Mphahlele is facing a charge of murder for the death of his wife Prudence Mphahlele. Her naked body was found in a bath tub of water in their home on the East Rand on November 17 2019. Mphahlele claimed his wife had drowned but postmortem results showed she was strangled.

Sowetan editor-in-chief Nwabisa Makunga said: “What happened in this court was completely outrageous. It goes against every rule of an open and just society…We condemn this incident in the strongest possible form.

“We reject nefarious attempts, such as these, to undermine the principle of transparen­cy which is a cornerston­e of our democracy.”

Makhudu Sefara, chairperso­n of the media freedom committee in the SA National Editors Forum (Sanef), said the actions of the magistrate were worrying.

“I am completely shocked and I think that this matter raises a very serious issue about access to the courts and how the presiding officers are treating journalism with contempt because if they had respect for what we do do for society, the presiding officer would not have taken the actions that he did,” Sefara said.

Spokespers­on for the ministry of justice Chrispin Phiri said nothing could be done.

“No-one can intervene in a decision that has been taken by the court, even the minister can’t. I agree with you that it is something weird. I have never heard of it in my life,” he said.

The magistrate will make a decision on the applicatio­n when the matter goes to trial in May 2023.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa