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One step forwards, one back for democracy

By Anton Harber

IF JOURNALISTS in Zimbabwe had stood up in that country’s parliament to protest against interference with their cellphone signals, they would have been laughed out of the place. If they had done it in Rwanda, they would probably have been driven into exile, and pursued even there, with their lives at risk. Exiled critics of the Kigali government seem to have a habit of walking into bullets and garrotes.

Signal_jammer
Pictured is the signal jammer that caused uproar at the recent 2015 state of the nation address. Picture: NATASHA MARRIAN

In Ethiopia they would almost certainly have been arrested and sentenced to long terms of imprisonment alongside the 17 other writers currently in prison there for doing little more than protesting against censorship.

In SA there was pushback — and within days security agencies were backtracking and the speaker was giving an undertaking in court it would not happen again, as was the president in a meeting with the country’s top editors.

SA has a way of undermining and strengthening its democracy at the same time. One step backwards, and one step forwards. What we saw on the evening of President Jacob Zuma’s state of the nation speech was the security agencies seizing control of Parliament in a way that was alarming and shocking, a hideous overreaction to the threat of a bit of rowdy disruption. Only hours later, under pressure, the politicians had to admit to at least some of their misjudgments, which had put the focus of an angry media on them rather than their disruptive opposition.

It was a night in which few emerged with credit — apart, maybe, from Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng, who quietly left when the security men entered the House, as if he could not or did not want to watch this travesty.

Media organisations were in court during the week to ensure these things do not happen again, and to try to wrest control of parliamentary TV coverage from the hands of an overprotective speaker, prone to turn the cameras off when interesting (but embarrassing) things happen.

It is not clear yet whether the politicians can keep the initiative and send the security agencies back to their caves. While there was pushback, what we don’t know — and might never know — is exactly who made the crucial decisions and who will take responsibility for the blunders. At the moment, the president and speaker are shrugging their shoulders, and State Security Minister David Mahlobo is calling it a “glitch”, saying the intention of the jamming device was to protect against drones — an explanation so implausible that they are taking us for fools.

That is where our system falls down: those with authority or power seldom take responsibility for what happens on their watch. We still accept the “I didn’t know” excuse, even when this shows neglect of the duty to know. It is the same reason we still don’t know exactly who made the crucial decisions in the Gupta-Waterkloof airport scandal or the Nkandla rip-off. No one resigns and juniors are expected to take the rap. This is not new — it is one of those habits inherited from apartheid, and is the reason Eugene de Kock was just about the only apartheid killer who went to prison, while his political bosses are still having streets named after them.

But this week senior editors met the president and they talked of “the South African way” where “dialogue and negotiation was the preferred route to resolve problems”. The president appears to have raised hoary concerns about newspapers not properly correcting their mistakes, or showing dead bodies, with little awareness of moves in recent years to change these practices. But it was a discussion that went some way to clear the air, and led to promises of more meetings. Talks are also taking place with the speaker of Parliament, the State Security Ministry and provincial legislatures where there have been problems.

That would not have happened in Zimbabwe, Rwanda or Ethiopia.

Source:BDLive

Harber is Caxton Professor of Journalism at Wits University.

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