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Media Appeals Tribunal simply a wake-up call for sensible reporting?


by kerryn le cordeur on 19 August 2010

Thought of the day; mouthing off about some irritation; rallying support; sharing important information; or speaking out against a serious political issue. We’ve become so accustomed to using our Facebook and Twitter status updates to share our every thought with the masses, or at least our social networks. But with all the talk going on in South Africa about the proposed Media Appeals Tribunal and the Protection of Information Bill, media freedom and freedom of expression is being questioned, and there is the potential that this may not be limited to traditional media forms, but could include social media, too.

While we have a constitutional right to express our views on social networking sites, provided they are not harmful or damaging, and while this platform has been used to great effect to disseminate information; organise social action; and raise awareness, and spread this virally, we have also seen how governments can restrict its usage if it is used to comment on those in the political hotseat.

On the other hand, David Bullard writes that it’s a lot trickier to get hold of the individual who makes the critical, or otherwise, commentary about you online than it is to get hold of that same individual writing for a newspaper. And what about the global nature of the internet – comments aren’t confined to a particular geographical location, and it’s pushing it a bit far, even for a government hell-bent on control, to literally ‘go to the ends of the earth’ to track the one person who started a flurry of commentary on a particular issue. We have already seen the way in which we were still able to find out exactly what was going on during the Iran elections, despite the restrictions that government put into place.

The social media sphere is one where anyone is free to comment and ‘report’ on anything that takes their fancy – and perhaps this is where the proposed Tribunal and Bill serves as a wake-up call. It is all very well to break the news first, or to comment with no real understanding of the issue, or even to exaggerate for sensationalistic purposes, but at the end of the day, we have to balance our right to freedom of expression with that of freedom to not be discriminated against.

Bullard and several others feel that all this talk is simply that – talk – and that the Media Appeals Tribunal is nothing to be seriously concerned about. I hope so, as it would be unfortunate if, after having been given such an open and interactive forum as social media provides, and living in the information age, it’s all taken away.




Comments:

com  Richard said on 20 August 2010:
· Beware, and examine, current arguments in favour of legislation to curb the media or to create a Press Tribunal. The logic and the motives are as old and as falsely reasoned as the arguments set up against free speech two centuries ago. They are the same as the arguments used by the Apartheid government against the press two decades ago. Because the media are so transparently inaccurate at times and inefficient, the arguments for curtailing them are easily accepted … but dangerously misleading.
com  Phelo said on 23 August 2010:
This could be one of the ways in which democracy starts to deteriorate, owing to the silence that has to be posed onto citizens. Before the government tries to regulate freedom of expression and speech for the Journalist,they should learn how to regulate THEIR OWN BEHAVOIR to make sure that its expressed in the given nature. I think that Journalists should be regulated by thier own organisations(Projourno), and not the ANC...however, I do believe that Journalist should also include value-based wtiting in reporting, anything expressed should be done so in an appropriate way...
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