Sipho Mabena

By Sipho Mabena

Premium Journalist


Increasing attacks on journalists cause concern

The verbal lashing of journalist Samkele Maseko on TV by ANC deputy general secretary Jesse Duarte on Tuesday is just one of many examples.


An escalation of anti-media sentiment has experts and media freedom advocates worried, with incidences of verbal and physical intimidation meted out to journalists by politicians and the public being a common occurrence.

The verbal lashing of journalist Samkele Maseko on television by ANC deputy-general secretary Jesse Duarte on Tuesday is one of several recent incidents.

Examples include the abuse heaped on journalists reporting negatively or critically of the Economic Freedom Fighters, and those who worked for now defunct New Age and Afro World View, previously owned by the Gupta family.

The Electoral Commission of South Africa (IEC) is set to determine if EFF leader Julius Malema should be held liable for electoral misconduct and putting the life of journalist Karima Brown in danger.

The journalist complained to the electoral body after she was subjected to vitriolic verbal attacks and threats after Malema tweeted a screenshot with her number and called her an “ANC operative”, who was “not a real journalist”.

The IEC’s electoral offences department has reportedly received submissions from Malema after Brown filed a complaint of intimidation and violence, as well as enabling the abuse she has endured.

Ofentse Setimo, an SABC television journalist based in Pretoria, has experienced similar attacks. Recently he and a camera man were roughed up by a group of community members, led by an ANC ward councillor, in Lotus Gardens, west of Pretoria.

They were in the area to interview MMC for roads and transport infrastructure Lynn Senkubuge regarding service delivery protests in Soshanguve.

“We were in the middle of the interview when a group of people accused me of being a DA journalist. I was roughed up before we were able to get away. It was not the first time. I now avoid political stories because we are called instruments of white monopoly capital,” Setimo said.

Community newspaper journalist Reitumetse Mahope has been in the field for less than three years but has already had enough attacks to make him think twice about reporting.

Last month Mahope, who works for Rekord newspaper in Pretoria, was beaten by security guards for taking pictures of them assaulting a protesting nurse in Pretoria.

Mary Papayya, chair of media freedom at the SA National Editors’ Forum, agreed there was a worrying escalation.

“Not just politicians but also the public and police assault journalists.”

Freedom of Expression Institute’s Rea Simigiannis said “reporters should be allowed to do their work without any hindrance”.

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