Swaziland
ernment to access private information, rather than opening up the
public’s access to public information.
SCORES:
Individual scores:

1, 2, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1

Average score:

1.1

1.7

(2005=1.3)

Civil society in general and media lobby groups actively
advance the cause of media freedom.

ANALYSIS:
Civil society and other lobby groups are not doing enough to advocate for media freedom. The little activism that is done is not cohesive and often not visible. Weak relationships between the media
and civil society organisations (CSOs), where both sides often fail to
support the other, are partly to blame. There is no sense of solidarity and shared purpose. When the Times of Swaziland was recently
forced to issue a front-page apology for publishing an article critical
of the King, civil society was silent. The response from one political
lobby group, angry that the Times would not give them more coverage was, “Serves you right.” There is also pervasive apathy and lack
of leadership (“It’s like building a castle on the sand”).
Fear is another factor in the failure to react to media freedom violations. Most media institutions and many CSOs are financially dependent on government and fear falling out of favour with the authorities if they are too vocal.
The Media Institute of Southern Africa (MISA) - Swaziland chapter
has found media owners are more concerned about protecting their
business than fighting for media freedom. Often MISA Swaziland’s attempts to receive coverage on media freedom issues get rebuffed.
10

African Media Barometer - Swaziland 2007

Select target paragraph3