Media News South Africa

Rugby World Cup news boycott

NEWSWATCH: Sparking off major controversy ahead of the opening game of the 2007 World Cup Rugby in France, leading international news agencies on Thursday, 6 September 2007, launched a news boycott, reports the Mail & Guardian Online and Business Day. The latter also reports that SANEF and Government have agreed to to discuss all of SANEF's reservations on the draft Film and Publications Bill, as well as to hold a seminar on media ethics and freedom in relation to patient and doctor confidentially. Meanwhile, Jacques Pauw, executive producer of Special Assignment, has resigned from the SABC as a consequence of SABC group CEO Dali Mpofu's letter to SANEF last week, according to the M&G, and The Star.co.za reports that it is the personal viewpoint of Minister in the Presidency Essop Pahad that Government should consider stopping advertising in the Sunday Times.

The M&G are also reporting that Mpofu may have neglected to “mention a commercial interest that might have clouded his own judgement” when he led the SABC to quit from SANEF. Mpofu is denying there is a conflict of interest. The M&G has also published edited excerpts of Mpofu's letter to SANEF (plus the letter in full as a pdf, which Bizcommunity.com published on Tuesday [SABC's blistering attack on SA media]), with a counterpoint response from Thabo Leshilo, editor of the Sowetan and SANEF member, who states that the letter is “the most explicit display I have yet encountered of the racist notion that genuine concern about the erosion of press freedom is nothing but a bourgeois indulgence or a white pastime”.

Still on the SABC, the M&G writes that it has possession of a confidential market research survey, commissioned by Snuki Zikalala's news and current affairs division, that found in March 2007 this year that “South Africans think the South African Broadcasting Corporation treats government officials with kid gloves and tends “to cover up” government's wrongdoings” and that “[o]nly the investigative programme, Special Assignment, was seen as “above board” regarding credibility”.

Business Day writes that “[i]t is thought that the Independent Communications Authority of SA (Icasa) brought the pay-TV licensing announcement forward because leaving it any later would give MultiChoice sufficient time to sign up a list of exclusive deals with channel content providers for its satellite broadcasting platform DStv.” Multichoice announced earlier this week that it had made at exclusive content deals with two major channel providers (see end of MultiChoice to renumber DStv channels).

Finally, a few days ahead of the second annual Digital Citizen Indaba (http://dci.ru.ac.za), Internet researcher Arthur Goldstuck blogs from the new M&G-branded platform Thoughtleader.co.za that “[t]he three months from April to June 2007 are likely to be remembered as the beginning of the tipping point for social media and social networking in South Africa.” Goldstuck also predicts that by the end of August 2008, “blogs will not only be a mainstream component of most online media in South Africa, they will also be a dominant component.”

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About Simone Puterman

Simone Puterman (@SimoneAtLarge) is currently editor-at-large at Marklives.com and deputy chair of the Sanef online editors subcommittee. After majoring in psychology and linguistics at Rhodes University, and then completing her honours in psychology, she has been in the world of B2B publishing since 1997, with 7.5 year stints at both WriteStuff Publishing and Bizcommunity.com (March 2006-August 2013). Email her at moc.sevilkram@enomis.
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