President Robert Mugabe called for the lifting of "illegally imposed sanctions" on his
regime.
Rasool wins tabloid battle
Article By:
Mon, 30 Jun 2008 17:31
Western Cape Premier Ebrahim Rasool has won a complaint against
tabloid newspaper the Daily Voice, the press ombudsman said on Monday.
In May this year, the ombudsman found that the newspaper had
implied, in an article and editorial published in January, that Rasool
had given more than R1-million to an alleged criminal and druglord.
On Friday, the tabloid lost its right to appeal against the
ombudsman's decision.
In his complaint, Rasool said the wording of the articles, which
implied he had given taxpayers' money to Richard "Pot" Stemmet, who was
facing various criminal and drug-related charges, was "a serious
allegation against my integrity".
Apparently the Western Cape provincial government gave the Kaapse
Karnavaal Assosiasie (KKA) R1.6-million. Stemmet was one of three
leaders of the KKA.
Rasool told the ombudsman that the money given went towards
transport costs paid directly to the Golden Arrow Bus Company as well
as
contributions towards administration and logistics.
The ombudsman said aspects of the article were clearly not true,
such as its headline which read "'High-flyer' hits the jackpot" and its
opening sentence: "An alleged high-flyer and minstrel kingpin has
received more than R1-million from government even though he is facing
drug charges".
The ombudsman said that the KKA and Stemmet were conflated in the
article, which distorted and misrepresented the facts.
As part of his submission to the ombudsman, Daily Voice acting
editor Elliot Sylvester said his newspaper was a tabloid and "as such
much of what appears in the newspaper is written in a tongue-in-cheek
manner" and would be understood as such by their readers.
The Daily Voice was ordered to carry a front page apology and an
abridged version of the press ombudsman's ruling.