In 1992, Cardoso and a dozen others founded a journalists’ cooperative, Mediacoop, launching Mediafax. A dispute in Mediacoop in 1997 led to Cardoso leaving the cooperative to set up
Metical. Cardoso campaigned tirelessly against what he regarded as the disastrous recipes for
the economy imposed by the World Bank and the IMF, championing the fight of the cashew
processing industry and later of the sugar industry, against liberalisation measures.
Among the scandals Cardoso had been investigating in the last months of his life, one stands
out above all others. This was the largest banking fraud in the country’s history. In 1996, a
well-organised criminal network stole the equivalent of $14 million out of Mozambique’s
largest bank, BCM. Although the names of the main suspects were known there was no prosecution and no trial.
„ 2002 - No award was presented in 2002. MISA celebrated its 10th anniversary in Maputo,
Mozambique
„ 2003 - Dr. Augusto Raul Paulino
Through the award MISA recognizes the incalculable contribution made by Judge Paulino to
the judicial process in Mozambique, as well as access to information and freedom of expression in the region. Judge Paulino presided over the celebrated trial and conviction of six men
accused of murdering Carlos Cardoso, one of Mozambique’s top investigative journalists. The
trial was hailed widely as both a triumph of the openness of the court proceedings and an
indictment of the corruption among the country’s rich and powerful. By allowing the electronic media to cover the case live Judge Paulino gave the public an opportunity to form its
own opinion and that has been a major step and a positive example for the whole continent to
emulate. Although many Mozambicans may not be satisfied by the outcome, they have witnessed that the judicial system can work.
„ 2004 - Methaetsile Leepile
In March 2002 under Methaetsile Leepile’s guidance, the first ever vernacular Setswana broadsheet newspaper, Mokgosi, was born in Botswana. The weekly broadsheet has a circulation of
10 000 copies.
Leepile believes that there are compelling reasons to protect indigenous languages from extinction because when a language dies, a people’s knowledge dies with it. Editorially Mokgosi
newspaper also tackles social, political and economic issues from a developmental agenda,
ensuring that a previously large sector of the Botswana population is able to access credible
information on issues that affect their livelihood. Mr Leepile is however no stranger to MISA.
He was amongst the group of media practitioners who met in Chobe 1989 to discuss the future
of the media in our region. These discussions finally led to the formation of MISA through the
Windhoek Declaration. He became the first director of MISA in 1994 and left its head office in
Windhoek in 1999 to take up the management of the Southern Africa Media Development
Fund (Samdef). He left Samdef in 2003 to enter the private sector.

So This Is Democracy? 2005

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Media Institute of Southern Africa

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