mentary to the LCA’s efforts. Mostly, the
activities consist of training heads of
radio stations and political programme
presenters. While these efforts are important there is a need for longer tem
solutions and training programmes for
the media.
There was a small victory for media freedom in the broadcasting sector in 2014,
when Lesotho Television, a state television broadcaster run under the Lesotho
National Broadcasting Service, was allowed to briefly cover a High Court
case.
Justice T’seliso Monaphathi permitted
the television cameraman to take shots
just minutes before he presided over a
fraud case involving former Lesotho’s
minister of finance Timothy Thahane.
This development gives hope to the media since, according to the High Court
Act 1978 the judge has powers to order
everyone to clear the court if he finds it
fit. Lesotho television stations have never before been allowed to cover court
proceedings.

JOURNALIST SAFETY
Threats and physical attacks used
to prevent journalists from doing
their jobs
As in 2013, there were again this year
examples of journalists being physically
assaulted, threatened and unjustly detained in the course of doing their jobs.
On 17 July 2014, four unknown men attacked Ts’enolo FM, a private radio station in Maseru. The men assaulted a
presenter on duty named Mohau Toi and
vandalized radio equipment worth over
R100,000.000.
According to the radio station owner,

Mr. Mohau Kobile, the incident was politically motivated and he suspected the
All Basotho Convention (ABC), a political party lead by the Prime Minister of
Lesotho, since Kobile says Thabane is
angry that Ts’enolo FM presenters openly criticise him on air.

There is an
unfortunate history
of both government
officials and private
citizens in Lesotho
responding to media
criticism with punitive
lawsuits.
Kobile said Prime Minister Thomas Thabane verbally attacked the radio station
during two ABC political rallies in 2014
and threatened to have his son, Potlako
Thabane, beat Kobile. Responding to
Kobile’s accussations, the Secretary
General of the ABC, Samonyane Ntsekele, said his political party was not
associated with any criminal actions and
if they had anything against Ts’enolo FM
they would take legal action.
There is an unfortunate history of both
government officials and private citizens
in Lesotho responding to media criticism
with punitive lawsuits. In the wake of
the political unrest in August and June
2014 – an incident the Prime Minister
described as an attempted military
coup – two journalists were arrested
over a story published in the Lesotho
Times edition of 19-25 September. The

So This is Democracy? 2014

33

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