State of the media in Southern Africa - 2003
which hit the streets for the first time in August 1985. From the outset, The Namibian was the
only newspaper in Namibia that was brave enough to expose ongoing atrocities and human
rights abuses being committed by the South African occupation forces. Gwen’s determination to uncover and report the truth never wavered, despite concerted attempts to harass and
intimidate her and the rest of The Namibian staff. Gwen’s commitment to a free press remained steadfast after Namibia’s independence in 1990, and her paper continued to adopt a
watchdog role, this time over the new government of the South West African People’s Organisation (Swapo).
 1998 - African Eye News Service (AENS)
frican Eye News Service was the first media institution to be honoured with the MISA
award. Based in the first South African province of Mpumalanga, AENS had established
itself as one of the sub-region’s truly investigative news services. In its three years of existence, AENS, under the editorship of Justin Arenstein, had either halted or uncovered a series of
corrupt practices in the public sector - some of which had led to public commissions of inquiry,
or resignations of the affected officials. Its bold and extremely courageous reporting earned it
several enemies in both the public and private sectors of the South African community. The
agency attracted numerous multimillion rand defamation suits, and to date it had won every
case. Its team of journalists, especially Mr. Arenstein, had also been the targets of physical and
verbal harassment, including death threats and threats of assault, while also being personally
maligned. Despite this harassment and hostility, the AENS team carried on its mission with
excellence, exhibiting mature and professional journalism with depth and carefully verified
detail.

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 1999 - Bright Chola Mwape
he late Bright Chola Mwape was still a young man when he tragically died as a result of
injuries sustained in a car accident in August 1999. In 1994 Bright was Managing Editor
of The Post, Zambia’s leading and only independent daily newspaper. An article in 1996, in
which he criticised a Zambian politician for attacking a Supreme Court judge who had earlier
struck an important victory for the Right to Protest and Freedom of Assembly, saw him being
condemned to indefinite imprisonment. Along with his editor-in-chief Fred M’membe and
fellow columnist, Lucy Shichone, Bright went into hiding to avoid being hauled off to prison.
Later on Bright and Fred handed themselves over to the police in an act of defiance and bravery that challenged the Zambian Parliament to take their unjust decree to its logical conclusion. They were freed after 24 days. In 1997, Bright joined MISA’s regional secretariat to head
the Media Information Unit. His disdain for the hypocrisy of the SADC governments was
evident on the occasion of May 3 1999 in a dynamic speech he delivered in Windhoek, Namibia. In his speech, Bright angrily dismissed a proposed Media Award the SADC governments were considering, questioning their moral right to confer such an award amid their
obvious reluctance to refrain from or condemn government infringements on the rights of the
media.

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 2000 – Geoffrey Nyarota
eoffrey Nyarota, as editor-in-chief of The Daily News in Zimbabwe has displayed skill
and vision in keeping afloat the spirit and voice of independent media in a country where
independent media exist in a minefield of treacherous laws and intolerant authorities.
Geoff has come a long way since his days as a reporter at the Zimbabwe Herald newspaper. In
the process he has also ploughed a lonely furrow which is unavoidable for people like him who
fail to seek shelter in the ever convenient shade of complacency, silence or political cover-ups.
As editor of the Chronicle, he exposed corruption in high places in what was to become known
as the “Willowgate scandal”. The resilience of Geoff came of age in a sense, with the launch-

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So This Is Democracy? 2003

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Media Institute of Southern Africa

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