February 7, 2012

So how to report the elections?

The craft of journalism has been devalued and it is shocking how unskilled some journalists are.

These remarks by Professor Adam Habib, vice-chancellor of the University of Johannesburg, at a reporting elections workshop hosted by frayintermedia on March 4, highlighted that journalists needed critical skills in order to report with credibility on the upcoming general election.

Habib said that the essence of democracy was its substantive uncertainty. “This is the uncertainty politicians have around whether they’ll be back in office after an election. You can’t get accountability without it. In the South African context, our weakness is that we’ve never had a viable opposition.”

Habib said the media’s role in facilitating this substantive uncertainty was four-fold. “You have to be vigorously independent, but don’t be oppositional for the sake of it. The media has to reflect the plurality of voices, and we so often see poor voices marginalised. Additionally media ownership has to be pluralised as much as possible. And lastly, the craft of journalism has been devalued. It is frightening how unskilled some journalists are.”

He said journalists are not born, they’re mentored, and that this process didn’t happen overnight.

Habib was joined by independent political analyst Dr Frederik van Zyl Slabbert and senior research associate for the Centre of Policy Studies Aubrey Matshiqi on a panel that looked at the political landscape on the eve of the 2009 Election.

Matshiqi said the media had come under attack in recent weeks. “There is media bias, but not in a crude fashion. We think middle- class sentiment constitutes the totality of South Africans. The chattering classes are not necessarily voicing the sentiments of the other citizens of this country. We must always be conscious of this, especially in an election year.”

In a seminar on generating election story ideas to reflect diversity, Paula Fray, Inter Press Service regional director for Africa, highlighted the importance of stories having a balance of male and female sources.

“The questions you need to ask yourself include: ‘Do the sources interviewed provide a diversity of views and perspectives on the coverage issue?’, Does the story only include politicians and political analysts as sources?’ Your readers, listeners and viewers as well as civil society should also have a voice.”

Chairperson of the SA National Editors Forum (SANEF) Jovial Rantao spoke to journalists about managing election coverage. “Identify the battle grounds, the Western Cape, Eastern Cape, Limpopo, Gauteng, then drill down into each region and its dynamics.”

Included in the skills and knowledge-building line-up was Belinda Musanhu of the Electoral Institute of Southern Africa, who gave a presentation on how journalists could understand the rules of the election game, and Business Report editor Jabulani Sikhakhane, who looked at how journalists could go about costing election promises.

The day-long series of workshops and seminars included coverage of  hate speech, xenophobia and migration and culminated with a political party policy debate on whether South Africa is a xenophobic nation.

In a panel discussion, Daily Dispatch Editor Andrew Trench said the media has to take an advocacy role.  “A lot of our readers couldn’t care less about the issues around xenophobia and foreigners, some even harbour a deep resentment towards them. This is when you need to hold up a mirror to our society.”

William Bird, director of Media Monitoring Africa, called for the media to adopt an agenda. “Even if it’s a citizens’ agenda. We need to hold politicians accountable and expect more from them. I have no clue about any parties’ policies regarding xenophobia and migration.”

Political party policy debate participants included Home Affairs deputy minister Malusi Gigaba, Home Affairs spokesperson for the Democratic Alliance Sandy Kalyan, Independent Democrats chief whip Lance Greyling, former ministerial adviser to the Inkatha Freedom Party Dr Mario Oriani-Ambrosini and head of foreign affairs for the Congress of the People (COPE), Lyndall Shope-Mafole. It concluded with each political party’s representative making a commitment that their election ticket would not rest on an anti-foreigner platform.

Holding Politicians Accountable

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HOLDING POLITICIANS ACCOUNTABLE: REPORTING ON THE 2009 ELECTION & BEYOND

You are invited to attend a free one-day seminar series on March 4 at Hackle Brooke, Johannesburg.

- Resurgent inter-party violence in KwaZulu-Natal and the Eastern Cape.

- Political leaders turning the heat up with hate speech against their adversaries.

- South Africa’s huddled masses competing for scarce services, jobs and resources with millions of economic migrants and asylum-seekers.

- A fractured ruling party facing down the wild-card threat represented by an untested splinter movement.

- A news media shaken by job losses, threatened free speech curbs and the rise of virile new media and the tabloid press.

This is the face of South Africa as it enters the most hotly-contested poll since the coming of democracy in 1994.

In the interest of raising the tone and quality of the national elections debate, frayintermedia is presenting a dynamic day-long programme free of charge to journalists and editors. The programme offers participants the chance to cover as breaking news what some of the leading political, analytical and electoral role-players have to say about the election, to engage in debate with them – and to improve the quality of newsroom skills regarding electoral coverage.

  • Drawing together some of the country’s leading political analysts, editors and party policy-makers such as Dr Frederick van Zyl Slabbert, Jovial Rantao, Smuts Ngonyama among others, the programme kicks off with a debate hosted by Prof Adam Habib, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Johannesburg, on today’s volatile social and political landscape.
  • It then breaks up into a series of five tailored Seminars led by respected editors and electoral experts who examine key election coverage issues: how to cost the promises, how to generate and gender election story ideas, how to cover hate speech, how to manage elections logistics, and the legal ground-rules of electioneering.
  • This unmissable day concludes with a two-hour Policy Debate – to be broadcast by SABC Radio – between the leading policy-makers from the ANC, COPE and other political parties discussing their attitudes towards migration in the shadow of the election.

Who should attend?

- Journalists reinventing their careers

- Journalists, line-editors and editors managing election coverage

- Journalists interested in the future of their profession

- Journalists wanting to cover what top politicians, editors and analysts have to say about the looming election

- Editors and news-editors managing change, and journalism trainers

When? 07:30-16:00, March 4. Lunch and teas provided.

Where? Hackle Brooke, corner of Jan Smuts Avenue & Conrad Drive, Craighall, Johannesburg

Space is limited, so book now! Contact Debby Kramer at frayintermedia on 011-341-0767 / dkramer@frayintermedia.com

Download a draft programme here.