ITWeb - The Technology News Site
VIRTUAL PRESS OFFICES ™
FREE NEWS SERVICES
• Newsletters

• RSS feeds

• Alerts
CAREERWEB
• Register

• Post your CV

• Find your job
BRAINSTORM
• Subscribe

• Read online
iWEEK
• Subscribe

• Read online

• Get into iWeek
IT TRAINING
• TrainingWeb

ITWEB EVENTS

• Events Calendar
FEEDBACK
• Post your feedback

• Send us a news tip
back to the ITWeb home page     Brought To You By
 SEARCH

Sponsor's Message
Sabinet facilitates access to legal information - all updated principal acts, rules and regulations full-text Government and Provincial Gazettes from 1994 as well as Parliamentary monitoring. Click here for more.
Virtual Press Office ™ 
Click here for the latest
Sabinet company news
.
Free daily and weekly newsletters.
Latest IT and telecoms news, information and commentary.
Back to the Legal View Home Page
15 March 2007 

Media cries foul at proposed Bill
BY LEON ENGELBRECHT , ITWEB SENIOR WRITER
READ IN THIS STORY:

[ Johannesburg, 15 March 2007 ] - Media organisations accuse Parliament of trying to ram through changes to the Film and Publication Act that will introduce pre-censorship in the media, something not even the National Party attempted in the hey-day of apartheid.

The changes will have far-reaching consequences for Internet service providers, among others.

The SA National Editors' Forum (Sanef), the SA Chapter of the Media Institute of Southern Africa (Misa) and the Freedom of Expression Institute (FXI) say they “are shocked by the reported announcement by Patrick Chauke, chairman of the Parliamentary Home Affairs Committee, that he plans Parliamentary hearings for the Films and Publications Amendment Bill soon so the Bill can come before Parliament within the next three months”.

The organisations “believe this undertaking … is contrary to the promise made by minister in the presidency Essop Pahad, home affairs minister Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nquakula and deputy minister Malusi Gigaba that there would be extensive consultation with stakeholders before the Bill was presented to Parliament. It also conflicts with the decision to set up technical committees to investigate ways in which the ministry's aims could be met without undermining constitutional guarantees of media freedom.”

The media vigorously protested at the first draft of the Bill last year. It pointed out that it introduced the prospect of pre-publication censorship, which was counter to the media freedom guarantees in the Constitution, apart from the practical difficulties that would arise for the distribution of newspapers and online content. It also alleged there had been no consultation with the media beforehand.

No balance

The amendments, if enacted as they stand, would require “any person who creates, produces, publishes or advertises for distribution or exhibition in the republic any publication that contains visual presentations, descriptions or representations of… sexual conduct; propaganda for war; incitement to imminent violence; or the advocacy of hatred based on any identifiable group characteristic, shall submit, in the prescribed manner, such publication for examination and classification to the classification office, before such publication is distributed, exhibited, offered or advertised for distribution or exhibition”.

This means news reports or online content about Jacob Zuma's rape trial last year would have had to be censored, as would reports about the ongoing Iraqi civil war – as well as any jokes about Van der Merwe, the Irishman and the Scotsman.

The Online Publishers' Association and the Internet Service Providers Association expressed their reservations about the Bill last October, saying it failed to “achieve the sought-after balance between cost and benefit to society”.

Sanef, Misa and the FXI also noted “with deep concern” a statement reported in the Sunday Times last weekend that Gigaba remained convinced the media had to be regulated to limit child pornography and the exposure of children to pornography.

“There was a strong opinion from the media that the Bill went too far. We did not agree. I still don't think so,” Gigaba was quoted as saying. However, he said he would work with editors to find a compromise if they showed a real commitment to the protection of children.

Democratic Alliance Home Affairs spokesperson Sandy Kalyan says she has been asking after the status of the Bill for the last three weeks. “The minister has told the programming committee that the Bill will be re-tabled with ‘further amendments' by May. We have to wait for that before we can react. The Bill before the committee is not the one that will be enacted, according to what the minister [Mapisa-Nquakula] said.”

Related stories:
Adult sites face prosecution
NPA ambiguous on adult sites
Steamy cellphone pics could mean cell time
FPB appoints cyber inspectors
Online adult material distribution outlawed
Big Brother laws threaten World Cup
Online publishers decry censorship law
Media-muzzling law postponed


ITWeb Enterprise Mobility 2010 Conference

ITWeb Virtualisation & Cloud Computing
21 - 22 July 2010| The Forum, Bryanston
Booking fee:
R4 155.00 (excl VAT)
Virtualisation & Cloud Computing is designed for enterprise IT professionals who want to understand how to better manage the virtualised environment and also learn about the various categories of cloud computing and what the implications of moving to the cloud are for their business.

Click here to book your place today!

Platinum sponsor

Gold sponsor


 
 

Copyright (c) 1996 - 2012 ITWeb Limited. All rights reserved.
Would you like to see your news here? Contact us for more details at itnews@itweb.co.za
Striata Rackspace Sophos BBG Technologies