The Harbinger


Defamation: the new frontline of media freedom

July 4th, 2006

Defamation will be the battleground for the media freedom wars of the foreseeable future.

This has been building up for some time, as targets of the Mail & Guardian’s investigations team, for example, have been suing or threatening to sue in a bid to silence them. Just the cost of defending such cases can have a chilling effect on a small publication.

Defamation was also one of a number of dubious reasons the SABC gave for withholding the recent “Unauthorised: Mbeki� documentary.

And now Jacob Zuma is suing a range of media for things they have said about him and his trials. He is, it is reported, including cartoonists and song-writers among the recipients of his writs, and by doing so is challenging not just the work of journalists, but that of artists and humorists as well.

One has to wonder if he is serious about this and will see it through, or if this is just another skirmish in his political wars. It might just be a tactic designed to keep his critics at bay for a while. For Zuma – as for any politician - to canvass his reputation in the courts will be a large and costly risk, as he will be inviting the media to dig for further information about him and his reputation.

It is not an unexpected development for defamation to come to the fore in this way in a constitutional democracy still working out just how much space the media should be given. In the US, the rights of the media to say tough things about those in power was fought around a 1960 libel case known as New York Times versus Sullivan. “The case threatened to intimidate the national press and broadcasters from covering the civil rights protests,� journalist Anthony Lewis wrote in his riveting account of the case, Make No Law. “It was an epic legal battle – one that was crucial to the continuing freedom of the American press.�

In that case, the US Supreme Court rule that to succeed in a defamation charge a public figure needed to show “actual malice� on the part of the media. It was not enough to show that what was said was untrue and harmful, because the court recognized the value and importance of allowing the public to debate and discuss the conduct of public officials.

Justice Brandeis wrote the classic formulation of the argument when he said the US Founding Fathers “believed that … public discussion is a political duty … it is hazardous to discourage thought, hope and imagination; that fear breads repression; that repression breeds hate; that hate menaces stable government; that the path of safety lies in the opportunity to discuss freely supposed grievances and proposed remedies; and that the fitting remedy for evil counsels is good ones.�

The implication is that the public interest in promoting debate and discussion is more important than the need to protect politicians, even from damaging and erroneous criticism.

This stands in fundamental contradiction with those who are beginning to argue that the office of the president needs protection against insult (as SABC board member Thami Mazwai did), a hint that some will push for the “insult laws� which have been used against journalists in a number of African countries.

In truth, in a constitutional democracy, it is hard to defame a president, because all but the most ridiculous things you might say about him or her can almost always be justified as part of the important national debate. And that is why the SABC’s suggestion that their documentary was “incurably defamatory� is so dubious.

Zuma must be given credit for putting his money where his mouth is. When he launched a broad and generalized attack on the media, a number of us challenged him to be specific and take action if he felt hard done by. Now he is doing so.

I would welcome the case going all the way to the Constitutional Court. It will clear the air and make a fascinating case. What will be at stake will be two different views of democracy: one which favours openness and debate when it can be harsh, hurtful and even unfair, and one which is prepared to curtail open debate in order to limit the worst excesses of the media. What’s worse, the courts will ask: badly-behaved media or badly-behaved politicians?

I think the answer is easy, and the judges will have no trouble getting to it.

*This column first appeared in Business Day, July 4 2006

Entry Filed under: Anton Harber, Journalism, Media regulation

3 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Andrew Dicks  |  July 5th, 2006 at 8:58 am

    In your optimism for a media victory you have to remember that this country does not have a great history of press freedom.
    Secondly, this is still a country, largely ruled by males with ‘dominant’ histories and cultural bayourckgrounds where being questioned and the concept of transparency does not really exist. I believe that it may be this hurdle that is, and will be for a while, the hardest to get over. (Jacob Zuma will likely find allies in the strangest places in this bid to stiffle the media a bit)
    I am in no ways completely confident that our constitution will protect our rights to ‘have a go’ when we feel it is necessary

  • 2. Jacobson Attorneys&hellip  |  July 5th, 2006 at 10:24 pm

    Zuma sues media over alleged defamation

    Former Deputy President Jacob Zuma has delivered letters of demand to several members of the media for alleged defamation.  In total he is presently claiming R63 million from Highveld Stereo (for playing a satirical song called “My name is Zuma”), …

  • 3. Inyoka  |  July 9th, 2006 at 10:57 am

    An interesting analysis.

    Blogs are very much part of the established media today and as such could also be targeted by the likes of Mugabe and Zuma.

    What will be interesting is whether the scribblers of anonymous blogs can be identified and sued, and whether the hosting organisations could be deemed to be suable because of what is said on one of their sites.

    Hosts claim that they will protect the identity of subscribers… but will they?

    The issue is made more complicated by the fact that the hosts could be situated in the USA and the blogger resident in the UK. The question is whether a SA court would be bothered to take on such a nebulous duo, unless what is claimed is really over the top.

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Anton Harber: Media

Anton Harber

Professor Anton Harber directs the Journalism and Media Studies Programme at Wits University. He is former editor of the Mail & Guardian.
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Worth Reading

“I had assigned my students to produce a multisource, multimedia feature story on a topic of their choice. Several incorporated video segments, and the influence on these students’ video storytelling was clear. So I asked them about it.
It wasn’t the evening news. It wasn’t cable TV.
“Daily Show,� one said.
“Colbert Report,� added another.
“The Onion,� one said, as heads nodded around the room.
Just as I suspected. Why not local and cable TV news, I asked?
My students complained about the titillation - fear-mongering crime reports, salacious coverage of the entertainment industries, reporters and anchor people glammed up to look like models. And when TV reports covered more serious issues, including politics, they result as little more than propaganda - talking points served up from two sides, with no analysis testing the claims, beyond petty insults.”
- Robert Niles, editor of Online Journalism Review.

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Radio Audiences, April 2007

Thousands of listeners, past 7 days
5fm 1438
567 Capetalk 143
Jacaranda 2617
Kfm 1116
Highveld 1255
Yfm 1200
Algoa 799
Cki 520
Classic 199
East Coast 1824
Gagasi 1603
Good Hope 571
Heart 563
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Kaya 1417
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2000 271
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Total radio 28809

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Other writings

Reflections on Journalism in the
Transition to Democracy - Ethics & International Affairs 18, no. 3 (2004).
Click here [PDF format]
Journalism in the Age of the Market - Harold Wolpe Memorial Lecture, Centre for Civil Society, University of KZN, Aug 2002
The untimely death of South Africa’s finest daily - Sunday Times, May 2005

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