Ah, politics in Cape Town. The cynical allegiances. The bitter battles. The spy tapes and the scandals.
A review of the city and province’s politicians over the past 15 years reads like the cast of characters in a Carl Hiaasen novel: the musical Peter Marais and Gerald Morkel who liked to lunch with Jurgen Harksen, Niel Barnard and his penchant for spy games and then lately we’ve had Ebrahim Rasool v Mcebisi Skwatsha and Helen Zille v Badih Chabaan.
This contested, murky battleground is a fascinating place to be a political journalist but, as we have seen recently, it is also a dangerous one. The Cape Argus gobsmacked us at the end of June with revelations that Ashley Smith, a reporter for the Argus until he resigned amid a disciplinary enquiry in April 2006, had confessed in an affidavit to the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) that he acted as a spindoctor for Rasool, then the Western Cape premier.
Smith told the newspaper he and Joseph Aranes – then political editor of the paper and who has since resigned from the Argus – used their positions to help Rasool in his campaign against political rivals within the ANC. He also claimed and that the two received money from a public relations company that obtained provincial government contracts. Click here to read the Argus’s remarkable expose of its former political reporter’s confession and here to read the paper’s front-page editorial that accompanied the story.
Rumours of this skullduggery had been bubbling around for quite some time and the Argus itself first came across the allegations five years ago when members of the Western Cape ANC claimed that two of the paper’s staff members were secretly being paid to write news articles that were favourable to Rasool. Click here to read the Argus’s story run on page 15 of the paper on the same day about the sequence of events over the five years and their attempts to nail down the allegations.
The Argus’s package made for shocking and utterly compelling reading. If true, this is a serious breach of journalistic ethics and a terminal abuse of the public’s trust in journalism. Not since former City Press editor Vusi Mona, now a spindoctor in the presidency, emerged as a chief player in a bribery scandal in a Mpumalanga court case last year, have we had such skandaal in Media Land.
But I think everyone is agreed that the Argus, which is owned by Independent Newspapers, played this exactly right. Most hacks – whether they be junior reporters or editors – find that if they apologise sincerely when things go wrong or mistakes are made that the readers are, in fact, quite forgiving.
Under the astute and ethical leadership of Chris Whitfield, a former editor of both the Cape Times and Argus and now editor-in-chief of both papers plus the Weekend Argus and Daily Voice, the Argus played open cards with its readers to a remarkable degree. The cynical among us might say they had to ‘fess up before another paper got hold of it. In fact, the Mail & Guardian had a stab at it last year based on a set of tape recordings involving Rasool’s successor, Lynne Brown. Whitfield, however, felt the M&G story – which alleged Argus reporters were being paid cash in brown envelopes – was on shaky ground factually and the M&G’s ombudsman agreed. (Incidentally, payments of this kind did not come up in Smith’s confession.)
It is clear from the Argus’s own tale of how they finally got to the bottom of the allegations that they made every effort over five years to pursue it and lay their hands on actual evidence of wrong-doing. And in fact, Whitfield told me this week that senior reporter Murray Williams, who authored Wednesday’s front-page story, was put on this investigation six months ago…CLICK HERE TO READ THE INTERVIEW WITH WHITFIELD AT MY REGULAR COLUMN SPOT AT JOURNALISM.CO.ZA
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The Times has a much smaller circulation than the Sunday Times and the DA didn’t go to Ray Hartley’s paper — it went to Mondli Makhanya’s paper.
The Tutu interview is long but well worth a read and a fascinating insight into the man most South Africans adore. It also appears that the Arch has written a children’s book called “God’s Dream” published by Walker Books in the UK. The message of the book is that we are all God’s children no matter what our differences but is not, apparently, a bible puncher. 







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