Revolutionary mutterings at SABC

Five things you need to know about SA today

1. Boy, are temperatures are running high at the SABC. An email sent out at the weekend by a group of anonymous SABC “honest reporters”  says there are plan afoot to hold a shop stewards’ meeting “which would enable it to compile a comprehensive “action” report on each instance of  (SABC) mismanagement”. Says the email:

These dedicated broadcasters are now seeing their stirling efforts sabotaged on a daily basis by deployees of sinister gangs, whose drive to enrich a select few will stop at nothing. Incompetent girlfriends of deployees abound, and they abuse their “SABC given authority” to enslave their subordinates. “They are no more that cheap call girls. Some can’t even read or write, but the men who hired them – using your licence fee – advise them to be dictatorial with questioning servants,” said one union official.

Yislaak!  If it’s legit, there must be mnay revolutionary mutterings in the canteen. They say they will reveal themselves in due course and are looking for support from others in the media. Read the full email here and show your support by emailing honestreporter@gmail.com.

2. Rather timeously, veteran marketing and media writer Chris Moerdyk has written a good analysis at New24 of how the SABC’s mandate is totally unachievable and why it’s destined to fail. Read it here.

3. David Bullard is upping the ante as his court date with the Sunday times approaches. His latest column at the Richmark Sentinel, which goes out on a Sunday, is a laugh and a half, with him taking umbrage at making a list of SA intellectuals compiled by The Weekender. He says:

I may be many things…..cigarette scrounger, drunk, bottom pincher, Bonzo Dog fan even…..but don’t ever dare call me an intellectual. As Charles Bukowski said “An intellectual is a man who says a simple thing in a difficult way; an artist is a man who says a difficult thing in a simple way.

Hear, hear! He also challenges other hacks who made the list, his former Sunday Times editor Mondli Makhanya and Business Day columnist Xolela Mangcu, to a debate at Constitution Hill. Loser buys the drinks. Read the full piece here.

4. Also in media land, Avusa announced it has appointed a public editor, one of the recommendations made last year by Anton Harber’s team invited to look into problems at the Sunday Times and make recommendations. He is Thabo Leshilo, the former editor-in-chief of Sunday World and the Sowetan.  In April, Harber wrote that the Sunday times hadn’t “largely ignored” the recommendations so maybe they’ve dusted  the document off and are implementing things. I hope so. When The Sunday Times published the findings, I was shocked by how disfunctional the news room seemed to have become and how unhappy the hacks obviously are. Read the Avusa announcement here.

5. And outside media land, that controversial Wild Coast toll road is on again. Read the Dispatch story here. It’s sure to get howls of protests again though I must say I’m with the government on this one. As much as the environmentalists and surfers would like to keep the Wild Coast pristine, the people of the Transkei desperately need more infrastucture and money coming into the area — and that starts with roads.

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12 Comments For This Post

  1. ANTHONY DUKE Says:

    I suffered a similar fate after 13 years of service and attempts to make SABC a great braodcaster. I have kept a paper trail of many such instances. Contact me if you wish.

    Ant

  2. ANTHONY DUKE Says:

    I have – didn’t you get it?

  3. Freejeff Says:

    I’m afraid you don’t understand the issues along the Transkei Wild Coast in the slightest.

    Actually, the *toll* road will drive up transport costs for the locals, and it doesn’t lead anywhere except Port St Johns to Port Edward, so it’s hardly beneficial to them, is it?

    The toll road paves the way for strip mining and other environmentally unfriendly macro-economic developments.

    The proposed route goes directly through the Pondoland Centre of Endemism, an internationally recognized biodiversity hotspot which contains close to 2,000 species in an area of only 1,800 km2. Furthemore 196 of them are endemic, and dozens of those are on the red data endangered species list.

    The route will divert traffic away from Bizana, Flagstaff, Lusikisiki, Kokstad, Mt Frere, Mt Ayliff and Qumbu.

    The optimal solution would be to have the current road upgraded. Hundreds of families will be displaced by the planned toll road, to save a mere 80km of travel.

    There are many, many more reasons why it’s a bad thing. As much as there are hidden agendas and vested interests.

  4. Freejeff Says:

    Check this Facebook group http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=6464240822

    and this cause http://apps.facebook.com/causes/21445?m=8c3a5226&recruiter_id=5652911 for more info and updates.

    Also http://www.wildcoast.com

  5. gillm Says:

    I’m sorry Jeff, I don’t think I do understand. How will it drive up transport costs for locals when they will ahve more choice? People in Port St Johns and surrounding villages, for instance, will be able to catch a taxi straight to East London along the new toll road instead of having to go to Mthatha and then get another one to EL.

    And I don’t think traffic will be diverted away from the N2 towns. I think the N2 will remain the main through route for trucks and taxis. Tourists don’t stop at any of these towns at the moment except to refuel and use the loo while the new toll road will bring many more tourists into the Kei that otherwsie wouldn’t go there — like me for instance. I know about the mining issue and that’s a real problem but essentially separate from the long-term benefits of having better roads.

  6. gillm Says:

    And hi there to Anthony. You’re the genius who started Capital Radio! Respect, dude. What a great station that was. It brought a gazillion of pleasure to East Londoner, who couldn’t pick up any other good stations in the 80s and connected us to the world.

  7. gillm Says:

    …”a gazillion hours” I meant to say. Does anyone remember the big Capital count down in December every year and they always made “Bridge over Troubled Water” number one because it was the first song they ever played on air? It’s also where Barry Ronge really started off with his movie show on Sundays.

    It was the soundtrack of my youth, Anthony. It’s a pleasure to have you at Grubstreet.

  8. Freejeff Says:

    No toll road in the world has ever helped the rural communities they run through, and they drive up their transport costs because of the *tolls*. Obviously. Look at all the squatter shacks on the side of the road between Hibberdene and Durban, and btw, have you ever seen those people taking their lives in hand, desperately trying to cross the current N2 toll road in peak holiday season?

    Sure, it will bring people like yourself to the area, which will inevitably become an extension of the South Coast, and spell doom for the centre of endemism and what is one of the last pristine areas in South Africa.

    Also, the previous EIA (the current one has not yet been finalized) points out that there will be significant environmental damage, and, to ensure safety the road will be fenced off and there will be very limited access. This will result in several things: traditional grazing grounds will be cut off, inland local residents will not be able to reach the coastline for subsistence fishing, and coastal residents will not be able to gain access to the road network without going extreme distances out of their way. So tell me again, who’s benefit are they claiming this is for exactly?

    At an estimated cost (in 2002) of between R2 – R3 billion for a 4 lane highway, it would be wiser to rather upgrade the current roads and spend the rest on education and socio-economic development. Unfortunately there are billions in revenue at stake with the mining and the *toll* road, and first world style macro-economic tourism, industrial and agricultural developments; so the most basic human traits of greed, foolishness, and self-interest will most likely ensure the end result. Unfortunately.

    The road between Port St Johns and Mthatha is actually an excellent road. I drove that road, both ways, every workday for 2 years in the mid 90′s, and I know people that still do that.

    They’re busy surveying the road between Coffee Bay and Hole in the Wall at the moment, as it is going to be tarred. I had a young man come to me in tears a few weeks ago because the surveyor had put a marker on his property and he thought that they would be demolishing his home to make way for the road. He’s spent years and all his income on building his own home, and no amount of money can replace that. So I phoned the surveyor to inquire, and established that there would be no relocations, and thus put his mind at rest. True story.

    But imagine what’s going to happen to hundreds of families if they go ahead with the proposed route. It just makes so much more sense to upgrade the existing R61. Environmentally, socially AND economically. Even if it is more expensive in the short term.

    People should learn to respect nature more, and not place economic development ahead of quality of life or “sense of place”.

    By the way, the proposed toll road goes from PSJ to Mthatha, and from there to Idutywa, Butterworth and East London. You can download the old EIA with a map of the proposed route here: http://www.nra.co.za/content/EIA083EcoRpt1.pdf

  9. gillm Says:

    Hey Freejeff. I’m guessing you don’t live in the Eastern Cape.

    I agree it would be better to spend money on schools, hospitals and other socio-economic projects in the Transkei than building a road. However, the reason why this road is going ahead is that it falls under the national roads agency and they acutally get things done.

    The provincial government here is so dysfunctional that they have vast budget surpluses every year because government departments do not have skills to build and maintain things. Most businesses in the province refuse to work for the provincial government as they take so long to pay and you’ve got to get debt collectors to get your money out of them. Corruption is also rife and there is much skullduggery in the tender process. I’ve even heard BEE companies complain that they are just part of a window-dressing scheme when tendering as the work has already been promised to a relative of a civil servant.

    So, socio-economic development in the Transkei? That’s not going to happen. It’s a pipe dream.

  10. Freejeff Says:

    Wow. That’s a real dose of positivity for a Monday. :-/

    So your view, now, is that the N2 *toll* road is justified because a) SANRAL “get things done” and b) there can be no socio-economic development so we may as well destroy the Pondoland Center of Endemism and thousands of people’s lifestyles in the name of economic progress?

    I’ve lived in the Transkei all my life (barring a few years in Durban & Jozi) and I wouldn’t want to live anywhere else. Been a full-time resident of Hole in the Wall for the past 3 years, and, apart from various other things, I’ve been working on a community development project funded by DEAT’s SRPP programme (Social Responsibility Policy and Projects).

    There is socio-economic development. But it’s happening very slowly and will take decades, even centuries, before there are equal opportunities for the tribal communities that got left behind. Please God let them still have access to their own land and heritage by the time that happens.

    And there is no rush. South Africa is basically a welfare state, and with their sense of community and extended families; nobody is starving in these areas. We have time. African Time. : )

  11. Gill Says:

    Freejeff, My apologies. I didn’t know you were a Transkeian and know of what you speak. I’ve been thinking of going deeper into this and would love to chat to you if you wouldn’t mind (after doing muhc more reading on the subject).

  12. Freejeff Says:

    Gill, without meaning to sound disparaging or condescending, I accept your apology wholeheartedly; and hope you do contact me with any queries or issues. My primary email for this cause is webmaster@wildcoast.com.

    If there is anything I can do to help your research, please let me know. I would really love to have someone with superior literary skills on our side. I feel totally inadequate to express the depths of the injustice I perceive.

    Hope to hear from you.

    Jeff Brown
    074-101 5170

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