State of the media in Southern Africa - 2003
This negates any government justification for this kind of censorship. Restricting information
from the public domain is a sure-fire way to allow rumors and innuendo to surface that may be
more damaging to reputations than openly allowing ongoing discourse on the issue.
MISA-SA urges government to ensure the free flow of information in these cases, to inform
public discourse on the issue and show to the nation and the world that justice is taking its
course and that government has nothing to hide.
Press Statement
October 16, 2003
TOPIC: Media defence groups condemn Hefer ruling
Following is a joint statement of the SA National Editors Forum (Sanef),
South Africa chapter of the Media Institute of Southern Africa (MISASA) and the Freedom of Expression Institute (FXI)

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LOEMFONTEIN: The South African National Editors’ Forum (Sanef), the Freedom of
Expression Institute (FXI)and the South Africa Chapter of the Media Institute of Southern
Africa (MISA-SA) have expressed disappointment at Hefer Commission chairman Justice
Joos Hefer’s ruling that former Sunday Times reporter Ranjeni Munusamy would have to testify before the commission.
She was subpoenaed to give evidence to the commission about her story that the African
National Congress (ANC) investigated National Director of Public Prosecutions Bulelani
Ngcuka as an apartheid government spy. The judge’s ignored a substantive argument from
the three organizations this morning which argued that media freedom and journalists’ lives
would be in danger if they were forced to testify and identify their sources. The group’s
submission spelled out how informants in the public and private sector who wanted to blow
the whistle on crime, corruption and misdemeanor, but who did not want to report to the
authorities, preferring the media, would refrain from doing so. This type of information,
which generally requires journalists to maintain the confidentiality of their sources, would
dry up if they were perceived to be informers of the police and the authorities. This would cut
off essential information channels for the media.
The organisations were shocked that the judge had ignored an affidavit presented by Munusamy
to the commission in which she claimed that her life had been threatened by some of her
sources. Munusamy’s lawyers are taking the judge’s decision on review to the High Court.
MISA-SA, FXI and Sanef who support that decision in principle, will meet to discuss methods
of putting that support into practice. The decision is a serious blow to media freedom because
it places journalists at risk and erodes media freedom.
Issued by:

SANEF/MISA-SA/FXI
For further information contact:
Simon Kimani Ndung’u
Freedom of Expression Institute
083 7332675
Jude Mathurine
South Africa Chapter of Media Institute of Southern Africa
083 7991701
Raymond Louw, 082 4465155

So This Is Democracy? 2003

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Media Institute of Southern Africa

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