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Date
: 20/11/2003
Source: GCIS
Title: Netshitenzhe: Launch of SADC Media Awards
ADDRESS BY JOEL NETSHITENZHE, CEO OF GCIS: LAUNCH OF SADC MEDIA
AWARDS, SABC, Auckland Park, 20 November 2003
I should thank Mrs Mampane for giving us this opportunity to share
ideas on the launch of the South African Chapter of the Southern
African Development Community (SADC) Media Awards. The launch
concludes a process that started long ago, after a decision of the
SADC Council of Ministers in 1996.
We know that the wheels of government grind slowly. Put more than
ten governments together, and the problem gets multiplied manifold;
things may even grind to a halt. But the fact that we are having
this event today shows that we are getting there.
As we all know, since SADC got transformed from a co-ordinating
conference into a development community, it has been looking at
ways of strengthening its institutional mechanisms so that it can
implement the new mandate to focus on development and integration
in Southern Africa.
One of the things that arose was how to ensure a link -
coordination and synchronisation - between formal structures of
government and civil society, including the media, academia, labour
and so on. And at its meeting in 1996 the Council of Ministers
approved the establishment of the sector that deals with matters
that relate to our profession: culture, information and sport. It
made the recommendation that the SADC Media Awards competition
should be set up.
It decided, firstly, that the awards would recognise excellent
journalism, in the areas of print, photo, television as well as
radio journalism. Going through the recent discussions within the
regional committee, I saw that Ms Mampane made a proposal at the
last meeting in August, that we should include online journalism
and the idea is in principle accepted.
Secondly, the main aim of this award is to promote values that are
universal in their character, and which have profound currency in
our own situation in South Africa and Southern Africa:
* freedom of expression
* media freedom
* freedom of thought
* tolerance of divergent views and opinions
* media diversity and development
* support for the development integration programmes of SADC
* democracy, accountability and transparency.
These ideas, we can say with confidence, are enshrined in our
Constitution; they find expression in the praxis of the South
African polity.
Further, it was felt that it would be necessary, in order to root
the awards in the countries of the region, that the adjudication
committee at regional level should be constituted by the
chairpersons of National Adjudicating Committees.
Government Communication and Information System (GCIS) is meant to
be the media and information contact point for South Africa; and we
were asked by the SADC Secretariat to facilitate the establishment
of our own National Adjudication Committee (NAC). The rules
stipulate that this committee should consist of members of civil
society, businesspersons, intellectuals and other outstanding
personalities of renowned competence and qualities. I can vouch
that we have them aplenty in this meeting today as well as in the
committee itself.
We had as GCIS to convene the broad stakeholder task team that
helped to set up the NAC, itself finally established in June 2003.
The rules of the awards competition also stipulate that the
responsibility of this NAC is that of adjudicating the awards
competition in the particular country for submission to the
Regional Adjudicating Committee through the SADC Secretariat.
We should say that at GCIS we are greatly encouraged by the
response from our own civil society and their enthusiasm to
participate in this process. But there are many, many awards and
GCIS had to prepare itself when we arranged the first meeting for a
reply to the question: why yet another media award? Would it be
correct to say that there is award fatigue in the media; concern
that we might end up like the boxing fraternity: if you are a boxer
and cannot become a champion the best thing to do is bring a few
promoters together and set up an organisation (WBC, IBF, IBO and so
on); and you can easily end being champion.
But the uniqueness of the SADC Media Awards is that it helps
integrate South Africa in the sub-continent. It helps to ensure
that South Africa thinks not only about itself, but casts its net
wider in defining itself as it conducts the profession of
journalism. It helps ensure that South Africans come to realise
that in all respects, they are also part of the broader community
of Southern Africa, in other words for South Africans to realise
that they are themselves "makwerekwere"!
What is it that we would gain as SA from this kind of media
award?
To answer that question we need to go back to the basics, and the
major reference point, for us is the document that was recently
published by government, "Toward a Ten-Year Review".
Amongst the observations that it makes is that one of the major
challenges in the coming ten years building up to 2014, is to
ensure that South Africa expends as much energy and resources as
possible to ensure stabilisation, growth and development in
Southern Africa. It makes the point that this is not only on
account some African patriotism, not only for the love of the
people of Southern Africa and the rest of Africa, but because it is
in the profound interest of South Africa itself to ensure that
there is growth and development in our sub-continent.
The point is made that if we were to succeed for instance in
stabilising Zimbabwe, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) as
well as Angola and ensure their rapid growth in the coming decade,
that will help resolve some of the problems that we have in South
Africa. An analysis of foreign direct investment in our country
demonstrates that since 1994 there has been some improvement, quite
significant, but the reality is that it is not at the kind of level
that we had envisaged.
Research points to a number of reasons, and one of them is the
assessment of long-term prospects in South Africa because of the
levels of inequality. Many long-term investors pose the question:
with this level of inequality, can this society sustain social
stability? The second question that they pose is about the size of
our markets, South Africa in particular with a mere 44 million
people.
Now if you were able to ensure stability in Southern Africa as well
as growth and development, given the extent Angola and the DRC in
particular are endowed in terms of natural resources, we would have
a situation in which a combination of those countries and South
Africa would become a locomotive for faster growth and development
in sub-Saharan Africa and further afield on the continent.
Secondly when that happens, it mean that more people will be
employed in Southern Africa: there will be bigger markets, a
thriving middle class, development of industry in our own country
and the sharing of comparative advantages across the region. If
Angola has things that South Africa does not have, South Africa can
assist Angola to exploit those advantages, for instance, with
regard to oil. South Africa has other attributes that Angola can
help exploit. In other words, you are able to ensure division of
labour on the sub-continent with integrated as well as synchronised
growth.
That can only happen in the context of freedom and democracy, and
the media has an important role to play in that regard: to ensure
that Southern Africa consolidates its democracy, consolidates the
culture of human rights, including media freedom.
Some people may wonder, when we were referring to the values of
this award (freedom of expression, freedom of thought, tolerance of
divergent views, and opinion and so on), whether this does not
sound like pious words, especially in countries that may be
experiencing the jackboot of repression against the media.
The temptation, as we were informed today, among some of the
partners who we believe should be participating in this initiative,
is to adopt a holier-than-thou approach, a purist approach, to
these initiatives and argue that before all these ideals and values
are attained on the sub-continent, they will withdraw from media
awards process.
We believe that that is a wrong approach to adopt.
It's wrong because the fact of these values being adopted by this
collective that is SADC, is in fact a major achievement. It means
you have put up a lodestar; you have put up a frame of reference on
the basis of which you can legitimately, formally and informally,
hold governments of Southern Africa to account.
But, the other important consideration is that by participating in
these processes, as South Africa, as this structure of civil
society - in the kind of nominations we make, in our definition of
quality, in our definition of the criteria to select particular
nominees - we are involved in a form of struggle. It is a struggle
to ensure that in the whole of Southern Africa, the SADC Media
Awards values are observed, in other words, that there should be
media freedom.
So stepping aside, boycotting activities of this nature, awaiting
the dawn of an ideal world, would in fact be to shirk our
responsibility. It is better to participate in these processes and
influence developments from within.
I suppose attached to that kind of challenge - if we all agree that
participating in this process is a form of our contribution to the
development of democracy, human rights and media freedom in
Southern Africa - is the question whom shall we identify as the
heroes and heroines? Will that be merely on the basis of a passing
sensation, or will it be on account of the depth that individuals
show in understanding the dynamics within our own country and the
region as a whole?
As a developing region we share the challenge of ensuring that the
right to receive and impart information and ideas becomes reality
for all, including the majority whose access to the media, whether
as consumers or producers, has been inhibited by a history of
neglect and underdevelopment. We share the ideal of a media agenda
for development in which the concerns of the poor are not
subordinated to the fleeting sensations of the indiscretions of
celebrities. And we are convinced that these fleeting sensations
are the real dumbing down; not a reflection of the concerns of the
poorest of the poor.
It is our view that we also need to be resolute against any
dictatorship of advertisers and the public relations industry as
far as matters of content are concerned: so that companies, so that
journalists, so that practitioners, and so that editors are left to
weigh the facts about what is objective information; what is in the
interest of the public; what is it that they should give prominence
to; and that those decisions should not depend on the subjective
interventions and analyses of those who are in charge of marketing
budgets.
We all have a common interest in the existence of a vigilant,
investigative and independent media and we believe the vision of
SADC to establish the awards would serve the region and South
Africa well. We are convinced that the National Adjudicating
Committee will take the process further to fulfil the objective
which SADC has set, the objective towards which SADC aspires, as
part of the ongoing struggle for freedom from ignorance, freedom
from fear, and freedom from poverty.
We are convinced that, steadily, sometimes in invisible ways, as
these awards become part South African culture, South Africa will
become part of Southern African and African culture.
Thank you.
Issued by: Government Communication and Information System
(GCIS)