State of the media in Southern Africa - 2003
Press Statement
November 12, 2003
TOPIC: Ranjeni ruling (Hefer Commission)
Joint statement of the Freedom of Expression Institute, Media Institute of Southern Africa-SA Chapter, the Media Workers Association of Southern Africa and
South African National Editors’ Forum
Media bodies to fight Ranjeni ruling

T

he SA Chapter of the Media Institute of Southern Africa (MISA-SA), The Freedom of
Expression Institute (FXI), the SA National Editors’ Forum (SANEF) and the Media Workers Association of Southern Africa (MWASA) are deeply disappointed with the judgment of
the Bloemfontein High Court this morning (November 11, 2003) in which the court dismissed
with costs the application of former Sunday Times senior political journalist, Ranjeni Munusamy.
The bodies plan to join Munusamy as amici curiae if she chooses to appeal to the Constitutional Court later this month.
Munusamy had applied to the court for review of a ruling by Judge Joos Hefer that she must
give evidence to the commission about her story that the African National Congress investigated National Director of Public Prosecutions Bulelani Ngcuka as an apartheid government
spy.
The judgment disregarded substantive arguments and legal authority presented by the four
organisations that journalists should only be required to testify as a matter of last resort and
only after all sources of information have been sought and exhausted. Furthermore, the four
organisations had in their submission emphasised to the court the essential role that media
plays in our democracy and the danger of restricting their activities unless there is a reasonable
and justifiable basis for doing so.
We are particularly alarmed by the judges’ argument that nowhere in local jurisprudence is
there a clear statement that a journalist has the right to be called as a witness only as a last
resort. It is important to point out that all the existing cases relating to the subpoenaing of
journalists in our country were decided before the final 1996 Constitution. The supreme law of
the land now sanctions the right of the media to operate freely without unreasonable restraints.
Furthermore the court’s argument fails to acknowledge the injunction prescribed by our Constitution that when interpreting the Bill of Rights, a tribunal must promote the values that
underlie an open and democratic society based on human dignity, equality and freedom. One
of the values that underlie such a society is the existence of a vibrant media and the protection
against compelling journalists to testify - except as a matter of last resort - is a core pillar of
media freedom.
We view with concern the court’s motivation that because Ranjeni’s article to City Press constituted the “beginning of the story”, she is therefore “the primary source of information” and
the Hefer Commission “is entitled to know how she conducted her investigations”.
This judgment would set a frightening precedent where in future, journalists - as the most
easily identifiable sources of stories – would become by definition “the primary sources” of
information and hence obligated to testify or reveal their sources to prosecuting authorities,
courts of law or other judicial forums at whim.
So This Is Democracy? 2003

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Media Institute of Southern Africa

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