Snuki Zikalala

Snuki Zikalala is the president of the African National Congress (ANC) Veterans' League in South Africa,[1] and former Managing Director of news and current affairs of the South African Broadcasting Corporation.

Early life

Before joining the SABC, Zikalala spent 25 years in journalism and earned numerous awards, including the SA Medical Association's best medical reporter and government's communicator of the year.[2]

Education

Zikalala holds a BA Hons (industrial sociology ) from Wits University and an MA and PhD, both in journalism, from Sofia University, Bulgaria.[2]

Criticism

During his role at the SABC, Zikalala attracted criticism for his pro-ANC stance.[3] He was accused of using the publicly funded national broadcaster as a propaganda tool, sparking fears of a return to the days when the apartheid government used it as such.[4]

Zikalala blacklisted various independent commentators from appearing on national television,[5] [6] and was harshly criticized by an independent commission for doing so.[7]

Zikalala stated in an address given at Stellenbosch University that "The SABC is not the mouthpiece of the government of the day, nor should it broadcast its opinion of government policies, unless they relate directly to broadcasting matters".[8] In the same address he accused Rupert Murdoch's media company of having "an unashamedly neo-liberal agenda".

In an attempt to hit back at the print media, Zikalala oversaw the launching of a program called In the Public Interest. Zikalala stated that "just as the print criticises us, we will be able to criticise them".[9] In a response, the Freedom of Expression Institute criticized this move, stating that "The SABC is merely the custodian of this public resource. It is inappropriate for the SABC to use a public resource as a platform for individuals in the SABC to settle scores with individuals in other media."

Zikalala also continually denied the ongoing crisis in Zimbabwe. During an interview with Jeremy Maggs on SAFM he stated that "There is food, it's just very expensive". In the same interview he also said that during his stay at the Sheraton in Harare he had been able to order Johnnie Walker Black Label and mineral water and accordingly didn't understand what everyone was on about.[10]

On 6 May 2008, Snuki Zikalala was suspended with immediate effect by Dali Mpofu, Group CEO of the SABC. Soon afterwards, Dali Mpofu himself was suspended by the SABC board.[11]

gollark: `subprocess.run("bees", capture_output=True)` or something.
gollark: It basically sets some environment variables, runs various subprocesses with arguments assembled from some data structures, checks if a file exists, does some HTTP requests, and that is it.
gollark: I can't actually upload it because it has hardcoded passphrases, hold on.
gollark: Well, my backup script has to do some things which are not exactly text processing.
gollark: (I unironically support some form of this, probably not with JSON)

References

  1. "'Next ANC Leader must not have Smallanyana Skeletons'". Eyewitness News. 16 October 2017.
  2. "Personal Fact Sheet". Business Directory of South Africa. October 2005.
  3. "Obedient SABC seems content to can democracy". Business Day. 15 June 2006.
  4. Timberg, Craig (24 October 2006). "South African Broadcaster's Use of Blacklist Stirs Unease". Washington Post. Retrieved 23 May 2010.
  5. "SABC inquiry fingers Snuki Zikalala". SABC News. 11 October 2006.
  6. "Inside the SABC blacklist report". Mail & Guardian. 13 October 2006.
  7. "SABC blames the print media". IOL. 31 October 2006.
  8. "Politics, profits and public: Media freedom and television news" (PDF). Stellenbosch University. 3 May 2005.
  9. "SABC's new current affairs programme is blatant propaganda, say critics". IOL. 4 July 2006.
  10. "Let them ring room service". News24. 18 April 2007.
  11. Dominic Mahlangu (6 May 2008). "SABC suspends Snuki Zikalala". The Times.


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