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SABC treated like spaza shop
Article By:
Wed, 07 May 2008 11:53
The suspension of SABC news head Snuki Zikalala and CEO Dali Mpofu
is long overdue after they brought the corporation into disrepute, the
ANCYL said on Wednesday.
"[Zikalala and Mpofu] ran down the SABC like a spaza shop and
brought its credibility, image and reputation into disrepute," said the
African National Congress Youth League.
Mpofu was suspended on Wednesday for apparently failing to implement
decisions of the board.
His suspension came a day after Mpofu suspended Zikalala, the group
executive of news and current affairs.
The ANCYL said it would also wanted the current SABC board disbanded
and an interim structure put in place.
"All is not well at Auckland Park towers. Immediate and drastic
action must be taken to restore order and stability."
On Wednesday, the United Democratic Movement said the "fiasco" at
the SABC was "a case of the chickens coming home to roost".
Party president Bantu Holomisa said the
SABC had been criticised for
acting like state-controlled media instead of a independent public
broadcaster.
"The fracas involving the suspensions of Zikalala and Mpofu
illustrate that as long as board members and senior staff are selected
for their connections to the ruling party, there will always be
questions of bias and infighting."
Holomisa said the infighting at the SABC appeared to be about
replacing people perceived by one faction as being loyal to another
faction in the ANC.
"This nonsense of appointing people solely on their credentials as
ANC 'cadres' must end," he said.
"Surely they have now learnt that it keeps backfiring."
Freedom Front Plus leader Pieter Mulder said the suspension of
Zikalala and Mpofu seriously affected the credibility of the
corporation.
He said the political change in the ANC of Mbeki to Zuma had rippled
to the SABC board and its senior management.
"Everybody is repositioning him-
or herself at present and trying to
be able to survive in the SABC during the Zuma era."
Mulder said, in the process, "irreparable damage" was being done to
the SABC.
"Political subservient appointments are the surest way to destroy
[the SABC]," he said.