The media must be de-commercialised – R2K

22nd August 2014 By: Sapa

The media must be de-commercialised – R2K

Photo by: Bloomberg

South African media needs to be de-commercialised so that the industry can see true diversity, Right2Know campaign spokesperson Dale McKinley said on Thursday.

"If we want real diversity, the media has to be de-commercialised," he said during a round table discussion on diversity in the media.

McKinley said media freedom and diversity were two sides of the same coin, and one could not exist without the other.

When many people spoke about diversity they focused on print media, however the focus also needed to be on broadcast media.

"Most of the print media is for the economic and political elite. We should look at broadcast, particularly the SABC, as many people in the country get their news from the state broadcaster," he said.

McKinley accused the SABC of being a government broadcaster instead of a public broadcaster.

He said it needed to revert to its original mandate of serving and informing the public.

"The SABC is becoming a mouthpiece of government but concentration should be on the public," said McKinley.

He said one of the many problems facing the state broadcaster was the lack of funding from private companies, which forced it to show foreign content that did not speak to the needs of the public.

University of Witwatersrand (Wits) journalism professor Anton Harber said at the discussion that many media outlets in South Africa supported the African National Congress.

"In South Africa, we have a growing, increasingly dominant network of ANC-supporting media, supported by the state through the front or back door," he said.

"This is a historical correction and certainly it is an advance on the situation where only one newspaper in 1994 unequivocally called on voters to vote ANC."

Harber said the practice should be stopped if the independence and accountability of journalism continued to shrink.

"I'm not concerned about whether a publication supports or opposes the ANC. I am more concerned whether the culture of that newsroom is an open one that encourages a diversity of views and opinions," he said.

"And this is important for one simple reason – journalism is at its best when it is critical, probing, disruptive and discomforting. Journalists are at their best when they make trouble for those with power and authority."

Harber said diversity in newsroom demographics, management and ownership was greater than 20 years ago, however there was a lack of diversity in content.

"Before 1994, even under censorship, we had a left wing alternative media, a rightwing alternative media, [and an] active trade union media," he said.

"Today our media is overwhelmingly located in the centre of our politics and economics."

Harber said media diversity was critical in post-apartheid South Africa in order to correct the distortions and imbalances that were inherited from the past.

He said newsrooms, management and ownership demographics could be measured, but the real test was in content and audience.

Wits deputy vice-chancellor professor Tawana Kupe said the media had not served the public well on the issues of diversity.

He said people were afraid of differences and the media was not doing enough to address the issues.

"A lesbian was recently killed and it was reported as just another killing of a lesbian and lack of tolerance in the country," Kupe said.

"But what impact does such actually have on our democracy?"

Lucas Mafa, from the Black Management Forum's questioned the levels of exposure given to people at the grassroots level.

He asked who the media were serving if readers were not able to get information at grassroots.

"I am appealing to [the] media to see how best we can meet each other half way and ensure the voiceless are heard," he said.