Journalism under siege in SADC

Thirty years of Southern African Development Community, which offers little or nothing to celebrate, is enough time to reflect on journalism in the region.

Six months ago, the Nordic-SADC Journalism Centre in Mozambique was on the brink of closure.  A few weeks later, a website announced two or three editors' courses in South Africa to be conducted by an institute shaped along the lines of the NSJ.  Little has been heard about thoroughgoing edification of journalism in Namibia after the glorious Windhoek Declaration and the meetings that led to the legal establishment of the Media Institute of Southern Africa.

The Southern African Journalist Association based in South Africa is still very much in its teething stages and is concerned more with political problems in Zimbabwe and Swaziland while paying lesser attention to the creation of journalists through independent trade unions, mechanisms of self-regulation and the upkeep of a genuine and rigorous debate about professional standards and issues of ethics in the 21st Century.

Editor's Comment
Inspect the voters' roll!

The recent disclosure by the IEC that 2,513 registrations have been turned down due to various irregularities should prompt all Batswana to meticulously review the voters' rolls and address concerns about rejected registrations.The disparities flagged by the IEC are troubling and emphasise the significance of rigorous voter registration processes.Out of the rejected registrations, 29 individuals were disqualified due to non-existent Omang...

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