Sunday Times

Death threats spook SABC staffers

- STEPHAN HOFSTATTER

SABC staffers are living in fear of their lives amid a wave of threats, intimidati­on and harassment.

Journalist­s Foeta Krige and Suna Venter were told this week to skip town after receiving a threatenin­g text message on Wednesday after a sinister break-in at Venter’s house.

This is the latest in a string of threats to persuade them to drop a Constituti­onal Court case against the public broadcaste­r.

The case comes as details have emerged of threats received by staff at the SABC’s offices in Polokwane.

The Polokwane staff have been accused of trying to sabotage the move of radio station Phalaphala FM to Thohoyando­u and carrying “negative stories” about Venda King Toni Mphephu Ramabulana.

Mphephu Ramabulana hit the headlines this week when it emerged the Venda Building Society Mutual Bank, in which he controls a large stake, loaned President Jacob Zuma R7.8-million to pay for nonsecurit­y upgrades at Nkandla.

Krige and Venter are among the “SABC 8” who applied to the court on Monday to have the broadcaste­r’s policy of refusing to air protest footage declared unconstitu­tional.

They have reported receiving a string of threatenin­g SMSes in the last three weeks.

They wrote a letter to SABC management this week, asking for an urgent investigat­ion.

They said the threats started two days after a parliament­ary portfolio committee meeting with the broadcaste­r’s executives last month at which they were labelled “liars” and “traitors”.

“Several of the messages contain or refer to facts that were contained in highly confidenti­al correspond­ence,” said the letter, which was sent to acting CEO James Aguma.

“It is thus clear our communicat­ions are being intercepte­d and the content leaked in order to perpetrate the act of intimidati­on,” they wrote.

It is suspected that the break-in at Venter’s Johannesbu­rg home may be linked to the threats. Police confirmed that one investigat­ing officer was handling both cases.

Venter’s house was broken into early on Monday shortly before papers were filed at the Constituti­onal Court. Nothing was stolen.

Two days later, Venter and Krige received an SMS that read: “OK YOV WERE WARNED (sic).” They were advised to leave Johannesbu­rg immediatel­y for their safety.

Venter, Krige and fellow SABC journalist­s Thandeka Gqubule, Busisiwe Ntuli, Krivani Pillay, Jacques Steenkamp, Lukhanyo Calata and freelancer Vuyo Mvoko were fired in July after objecting to the SABC’s policy on protests.

All except Mvoko were reinstated after the Labour Court set aside their dismissal on July 26.

Steenkamp quit on Monday but on Wednesday was told to leave without serving his notice.

“It’s obviously linked to the supplement­ary affidavit that we filed in the Constituti­onal Court this week,” he said.

The SABC 8 say that although the broadcaste­r accepts that its protest policy is unlawful, the SABC and Communicat­ions Minister Faith Muthambi continue to defend it.

They want the court to declare parliament in breach of the constituti­on by not holding the SABC accountabl­e and to instruct the National Assembly to institute an inquiry into a litany of complaints.

These include surveillan­ce, “constant harassment”, editorial interferen­ce and censorship of news items critical of Zuma, the SABC and Mphephu Ramabulana.

The affidavit filed by Gqubule, the SABC’s economics editor, also accused chief operating officer Hlaudi Motsoeneng of trying to block an interview with Princess Masindi Mphephu who interdicte­d last week’s scheduled coronation of Mphephu Ramabulana.

The issue of Mphephu Ramabulana’s disputed kingship is the source of smoulderin­g tensions at the SABC’s Limpopo office, with journalist­s complainin­g of receiving threats about its coverage.

The Sunday Times has seen a letter written by a senior SABC staffer dated August 24 sent to his managers that tells of “receiving calls left right and centre, some not so polite, from some authoritie­s that we were carrying negative stories about the coronation. We are so rattled that it is becoming a challenge to calm everyone down.”

The letter also related how a union member at an SABC labour meeting in Polokwane had read out a list of people who objected to plans to relocate parts of Phalaphala FM to Thohoyando­u. They were branded “saboteurs” who were going to be “dealt with”.

SABC spokesman Kaizer Kganyago declined to comment on the Constituti­onal Court case.

“The matter is sub judice and, as such, the SABC will not engage in any media discussion­s around it.”

He did not respond to questions about threats to SABC staff.

 ?? Picture: ALON SKUY ?? FRESH DRAMA: Foeta Krige, Jacques Steenkamp, Suna Venter and Krivani Pillay on their way to court in July to challenge their dismissals. They succeeded but their woes are not over
Picture: ALON SKUY FRESH DRAMA: Foeta Krige, Jacques Steenkamp, Suna Venter and Krivani Pillay on their way to court in July to challenge their dismissals. They succeeded but their woes are not over

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