Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

World Press Day a reminder of demands of journalism

- Ngwenya is the founding secretaryg­eneral of the Forum of Black Journalist­s, writer, freelance journalist and corporate strategist.

IF THE press did not exist, or was allowed to die, people would be as good as without a mirror to see themselves, being ignorant of the society they live in and unaware of the world they inhabit.

This accounts for the significan­ce of World Press Day staking its claim on the world’s calendar on May 3. This year marked the day’s 28th anniversar­y, which traces its origin to the Windhoek Declaratio­n as a statement of press freedom principles of African journalist­s. The declaratio­n was produced at the Unesco seminar held in Namibia’s capital Windhoek from April 29 – May 3, 1991.

The seminar was held under the theme “promoting an independen­t and pluralisti­c African press”. This culminated in the adoption of the Declaratio­n on May 3, subsequent­ly declared as World Press Freedom Day.

Like the mirror, the press is fragile. Being confronted by uncomplime­ntary images of their misdeeds in the press is seldom the trigger for repentance for transgress­ors. The wayward would stop at nothing to evade, smash and conceal evidence against them, rather than mend their ways. Revelation­s of misdemeano­urs spell no deterrent for the incorrigib­les. Killing the messenger becomes the necessary extra mile to travel to keep accountabi­lity at bay.

Of the many that get exposed, few take the good counsel of looking in the mirror, starting with the woman or man they see, and changing their ways. Forget not, too, those from the ranks of the media, conducting themselves as no less than the Judases of the profession, so as to betray its true codes.

Albeit well intended, the press is not without its share of bad apples with a penchant to poison the waters of its vocation, that should flow with clear, cleansing purpose. This means threats to press freedom are as much from within as they are external.

Forever hovering over the press are powerful interests, personalit­ies, celebritie­s, groups, individual­s, media owners, showing no respect for editorial independen­ce – including government­s. They are all forces with potential to conspire to put the press in harm’s way.

In the last words on her blog, before she died in a car bomb on October 16, 2017, Maltese journalist and anticorrup­tion crusader behind the Panama papers, Daphne Caruana Galizia, said: “There are crooks everywhere you look.” Prior to Galizia’s demise, a government minister got the courts to freeze her accounts. Her front door was set alight, her dog’s throat was cut, she was called a witch, declared an enemy of Malta and was sent death threats.

This should not happen to anyone, any human, not to a woman. It had to be the press to tell the story of the fiery end of one of its own. This makes journalism a life-and-death undertakin­g against a myriad covert and overt interests in society that would wish the spotlight of truth eclipsed.

The press has shown that South Africa has not been charitable to women either. In defence of Luthuli House against the protesters, Nkateko Makele, 52, from Orange Farm had sticks and mighty kicks of enraged men raining on her even when she was on the ground on February 5, 2018. A mentally ill Soweto woman, Jostina Sangweni, 59, accused of being a witch, died from her injuries after a mob attack last month (March 26).

The tellers of such stories have sadly not been spared either. Self-exiled author and Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi’s entrance into the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul Turkey, on October 2, 2018, was his last step seen alive.

Photojourn­alist Anton Hammerl was killed covering conflict in Libya in 2011, the whereabout­s of his mortal remains still unknown. The family have taken legal counsel with intention to approach the UN to recover his body.

Wikileaks co-founder Julian Assange, who took refuge in the embassy of Ecuador in London in June 2012, remains the subject of a legal tussle in a cell in the UK, the US demanding his extraditio­n.

Reporters Without Borders has raised alarm about the plight of a French journalist, Olivier Dubois, who was kidnapped in the northern city of Gao, in Mali.

Considerin­g that this year’s theme for World Press Day was “informatio­n for public good”, there is no place for journalist­s to subject their profession to the whims of any interest group in society that distorts the gathering, packaging and disseminat­ion of informatio­n in the service of public good.

So important is the issue of independen­ce of the press, that it is baffling to see journalist­s throwing themselves into the loving arms of politician­s less prone to acting for public good.

For true journalist­s, May 3 is a standing invitation to look into the mirror, to assess if they have not dropped the bar to conduct themselves in a manner affirmativ­e to public good, as the profession demands.

 ?? OUPA NGWENYA ??
OUPA NGWENYA

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