Sunday World (South Africa)

Attack on Maughan an attack on us all

- Kabelo Khumalo Conscience of a Centrist

Ilike Karyn Maughan. She is one of the finest journalist­s this country has produced in the last two decades. And the harassment meted to her for merely doing her job is testament to the work she has consistent­ly been doing over the years, carving her path to become one of the country’s most eminent legal journalist­s.

It was celebrated former American president Franklin D Roosevelt who said, “I ask you to judge me by the enemies I have made.”

It should be a badge of honour for Maughan and many of her colleagues in the noble profession who are attacked daily for shedding light on wrongdoing and exposing the excesses of power by the powerful in society.

Public officials have long been known to grumble about perceived unfairness in news coverage.

But Jacob Zuma’s effort to send a reporter to jail for doing her job – an attempt to intimidate her, some argued – reflects a brazen trend of politician­s using government power to punish or push back on journalist­s for articles they don’t like.

The actions by Zuma and his supporters on social media sends a chilling message to the profession; either you toe the line, or your lives will be made uncomforta­ble.

As the Washington Post’s header always reads: “Democracy Dies in Darkness”. This slogan, which followed the inaugurati­on of Donald Trump as US president in 2017, recognises that a democracy cannot survive and thrive without an electorate informed by facts and truth by a free and independen­t press.

Why are journalist­s being harassed on social media at an alarming rate? The answer might very well lie with some “journalist­s” who have infiltrate­d the industry with alternativ­e facts – a euphemism for lies.

These informatio­n peddlers sow mistrust in the media and allow rogue public officials to “think there is a political advantage” in attacking journalist­s directly.

As we have previously said in our editorial, the light needs to shine brighter for good journalist and dimmer for those who seek to subvert this noble profession for their own nefarious ends.

When the powerful in society try to control or intimidate the media for their own purposes, it is the first step toward a totalitari­an or fascist state.

This democracy cannot die in darkness. With corruption a dominant feature of our society, being in the know keeps us free and empowers us to make better choices.

It was a determined group of journalist­s who shed the light on state capture and revealed the extent of the rot in stateowned enterprise­s. A free press is not a nice to have – it is critical to any self-respecting democracy.

We must look no further than the Russia and Ukraine conflict on how uncanny politician­s can kill democracie­s in darkness.

The biggest threat to a dictator like Vladimir Putin is an informed populace. He has managed to a large extent to lull the public in believing his is a just war. The Kremlin strongman was already running a tight ship even before the outbreak of war in Ukraine. He doubled down in March, when he enacted a law making sharing “false informatio­n” about the war punishable by up to 15 years in prison. Moscow also blocked access to Facebook and foreign news outlets.

Putin, like many of his ilk know that a free press is a danger to their excesses and a rooted need for unchecked power.

We too know the price journalist­s can pay for doing their jobs. Who can forget the slaying of trailblazi­ng South African journalist Henry Nxumalo, who was murdered while investigat­ing suspicious deaths at an abortion clinic in Sophiatown in the 1950s?

More recently, SABC journalist Suna Venter, one of the journalist­s that came to be known as the SABC 8‚ was found dead in her flat in Fairlands in 2017 at the tender age of 32. She is said to have succumbed to a condition caused by trauma and prolonged periods of unnatural stress.

Her and her colleagues’ only sin was to voice their concern about editorial policies, including the policy of refusing to air protest footage. The SABC 8 were harassed at every turn and received little public support because it would seem to some in our society, journalism is a crime. It is not. And the harassment of journalist­s cannot be the norm.

At some point, a chorus from the belly of the free press and people of good conscience should echo and pose a question to those who would tear down the fourth estate: wenzeni ukaryn? (what has Karyn done?).

 ?? ?? Karyn Maughan is being hounded by former president Jacob Zuma. Too many politician­s are using government power in an attempt to silence journalist­s.
Karyn Maughan is being hounded by former president Jacob Zuma. Too many politician­s are using government power in an attempt to silence journalist­s.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa