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Wikipedia

SABC

The South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) is the public broadcaster in South Africa, and provides 19 radio stations (AM/FM) as well as six television broadcasts to the general public.[3] It is one of the largest of South Africa's state-owned enterprises.

South African Broadcasting Corporation
Logo used since 2003
SABC headquarters in Uitsaaisentrum, Johannesburg
TypeTerrestrial television and radio network
Country
Availability
Founded1 August 1936; 86 years ago (1936-08-01)
by the Government of South Africa
MottoVuka Sizwe
("Nation Arise") "Everywhere For Everyone, Always"
Revenue R 6.6 billion (2017/18 FY)[1]
R ~622 million loss (2017/18 FY)[1]
Broadcast area
 South Africa
OwnerGovernment of South Africa
Key people
Blessing Mahlangu (chairman)[2]
Madoda Mxakwe [2]
(CEO)
Launch date
1936 (radio)
1976 (television)
16:9
Television
Radio
19 radio stations
Official website
www.sabc.co.za/sabc/

Opposition politicians and civil society often criticise the SABC, accusing it of being a mouthpiece for whichever political party is in majority power, thus currently the ruling African National Congress; during the apartheid era it was accused of playing the same role for the National Party government.[4]

Company history

Early years

Radio broadcasting in South Africa began in 1923, under the auspices of South African Railways, before three radio services were licensed: the Association of Scientific and Technical Societies (AS&TS) in Johannesburg, the Cape Peninsular Publicity Association in Cape Town and the Durban Corporation, which began broadcasting in 1924.[5]

These merged into the African Broadcasting Company in 1927, owned by, I. W. Schlesinger, a wealthy businessman, but on 1 August 1936, they were sold to the SABC, established that year through an Act of Parliament.[6] The SABC took over the African Broadcasting Company's staff and assets. It maintained a state monopoly on radio until the launch in December 1979 of Capital Radio 604, then Radio 702 in 1980.[7] Although the subscription-funded television service M-Net launched in 1986, the SABC had a monopoly on free-to-air television until the launch of e.tv in 1998.

During National Party rule from 1948, it came under increasing accusations of being biased towards the ruling party. At one time most of its senior management were members of the Broederbond, the Afrikaner secret society and later from institutions like Stellenbosch University.

The SABC was a radio service until the introduction of television in 1976. There were three main SABC radio stations: the English Service (later known as Radio South Africa), the Afrikaans Service (later known as Radio Suid-Afrika and Afrikaans Stereo) and the commercial station, Springbok Radio.[8]

Programmes on the English and Afrikaans services mainly consisted of news; plays such as The Forsyte Saga, Story of an African Farm, and The Summons, written and produced in South Africa; serious talk shows; BBC radio shows; children's programmes, such as Sound Box; and light music featuring South African orchestras, arrangers, musicians and singers. Accomplished musicians such as pianist and composer Charles Segal featured on all three stations regularly in shows like Piano Playtime. Accordionist Nico Carstens was a regular on the Afrikaans programmes.[9]

Recent history

 
SABC offices in Sea Point, Cape Town

On 4 February 1996, two years after the ANC came to power, the SABC reorganised its three TV channels, so as to be more representative of different language groups.[10] This resulted in the downgrading of Afrikaans by reducing its airtime from 50% to 15%, a move that alienated many Afrikaans speakers.[11]

The SABC has since been accused of favouring the ruling ANC party, mostly in news. It remains dominant in the broadcast media.

Criticism intensified around 2003–2005, when it was accused of a wide range of shortcomings including self-censorship, lack of objectivity and selective news coverage.

On 20 October 2020, SABC and the government were in discussion to get TV and streaming providers in South Africa to collect TV licence on their behalf.[12]

On 27 March 2021, SABC and eMedia Investments expanded their partnership which allowed OpenView customers to receive 3 additional channels as well as their 19 radio stations.[13]

Leaders

Director General of the SABC:

Surname Name From To
Caprara René Silvio 1936 1948
Roos Gideon Daniel 1948 1959
Meyer Pieter Johannes 1959 1980
de Villiers Steve 1980 1983
Eksteen Riaan 1983 1988
Harmse Wynand 1988 1994

Chairman of the SABC Board:

Surname Name From To
Matsepe-Casaburri Ivy Florence 1994 1996
Zulu Paulus 1996 2000
Maphai Thabane Vincent 2000 2003
Funde Sonwabo Eddie 2003 2008
Mkhonza Khanyi 2008 2009
Charnley Irene 2009 2009
Ngubane Baldwin Sipho 2010 2013
Tshabalala Zandile Ellen 2013 2014
Maguvhe Mbulaheni Obert 2014 2017
Makhathini Bongumusa Emmanuel 2017

Chief Executive Officer (CEO)

Term Name
1994–1998 Sisulu, Z.
1998–2000 Mbatha, H.
2000–2000 Khuzwayo, C.
2000-2005 Matlare, P.
2002–2008 Mpofu, D.
2008–2009 Mampone, G.
2009–2011 Mokoetle, S.
2011–2014 Mokhobo, L.
2014–2015 Motsoeneng, H.
2015–2015 Matlala, F.
2015–2016 Matthews, J.
2017–present Madoda, M.

Radio

Establishment

Following its establishment in 1936, the SABC established services in what were then the country's official languages, English and Afrikaans, with the Afrikaans service being established in 1937.[14] Broadcasts in languages such as Zulu, Xhosa, Sesotho and Tswana followed in 1940.[7]

Springbok Radio

Springbok Radio, the SABC's first commercial radio service, started broadcasting on 1 May 1950.[15] Bilingual in English and Afrikaans, it broadcast from the Johannesburg Centre for 113+12 hours a week.[16] The service proved to be so popular with advertisers that at the time of its launch, commercial time had been booked well in advance.[6]

The station featured a wide variety of programming, such as morning talk and news, game shows, soap operas like Basis Bravo,[15] children's programming, music request programmes, top-ten music, talent shows and other musical entertainment. One popular Saturday noontime comedy show was Telefun Time, whose hosts would phone various people and conjure up situation comedy, a similar brand of humour to the films of Leon Schuster.[17]

By 1985, Springbok Radio was operating at a heavy loss.[18] After losing many listeners with the handing over of its shortwave frequencies to Radio 5 and facing competition from television, it ceased broadcasting on 31 December 1985.[19]

SABC News Service

The News Service was established in June 1950, replacing the programmes of the BBC.[20] Although this was because the BBC broadcasts were seen as giving a British viewpoint of current affairs, there were also concerns that the SABC service would become overly pro-government, or "Our Master's Voice".[21] By 1968, it had over 100 full-time reporters in the main cities and local correspondents all over the country, with overseas news provided by Reuters, AFP, AP and UPI.[22] There was a News Film Unit which, prior to television in 1976, produced films for news agencies and television organisations.[23]

SABC Symphony Orchestra

The SABC Symphony Orchestra has its origins in its three studio ensembles in Johannesburg, Durban and Cape Town and the Municipal Orchestra of the Johannesburg City Council. When the SABC centralised its broadcasting in Johannesburg, the future of the three ensembles were in doubt but at the same time, the Municipal Orchestra of the Johannesburg City Council had been disbanded.[24] The SABC was able to form an orchestra of 80 musicians from these groupings in 1954, and while its main base was at the Johannesburg City Hall, it would tour the country.[25] The orchestra would be led for many years by the SABC's head of music, Anton Hartman, but had other conductors as well, such as Francesco Mander and Edgar Cree.[26] There were also international composers such as Igor Stravinsky.[27] The SABC Junior Orchestra was also created and began in February 1966 under Walter Mony.[28]

Regional radio

Regional commercial FM music stations were started in the 1960s.

Station Launch date Replaced by
Radio Highveld 1964 947
Radio Good Hope 1965 Good Hope FM
Radio Port Natal 1967 East Coast Radio
Radio Jacaranda 1986 Jacaranda FM
Radio Oranje 1986 OFM
Radio Algoa 1986 Algoa FM

Popular music

Following the establishment of a republic and withdrawal from the Commonwealth in 1961, the Afrikaners' goal was to promote their culture and so, at first, the SABC's choice of popular music reflected the National Party government's initial conservatism, especially on the Afrikaans channel, with musicians such as Nico Carstens. However Carstens was also ostracised by the SABC, as his music was influenced by the Coloured and Malay communities of Cape Town.[29]

Eventually, musicians broke through the barrier, when the young, English-speaking Jewish musician and composer, Charles Segal collaborated with the older Afrikaans lyric-writer, Anton Dewaal, to write songs.[30] Segal's songs like "Die Ou Kalahari" became highly popular with the Afrikaans-speaking public.[31] However, there was tight censorship over all broadcasts, particularly of pop music, with, for example, the music of the Beatles being banned by the SABC between 1966 and March 1971.[32]

In 1966 the SABC established an external service, known as Radio RSA, which broadcast in English, Swahili, French, Portuguese, Dutch and German. In 1969 the SABC held a national contest to find theme music for the service. This contest was won by the popular South African pianist and composer, Charles Segal and co-writer, Dorothy Arenson. Their composition, "Carousel" remained the theme song for Radio RSA until 1992, when it was replaced by Channel Africa.[33]

In 1986, the SABC ran a competition to promote South African music. Each of the 15 radio stations, represented by an artist, entered a song to compete for the Song for South Africa in the National Song Festival. The finals were broadcast live on television. The Radio Port Natal submission won the competition with the Don Clarke song, Sanbonani, performed by P J Powers and Hotline.[34]

1996 restructuring

In 1996 the SABC carried out a significant restructuring of their services. The main English-language radio service became SAfm. The new service, after some initial faltering, soon developed a respectable listenership and was regarded as a flagship for the new democracy. However, government interference in the state broadcaster in 2003 saw further changes to SAfm which reversed the growth and put it in rapid decline once more.[citation needed] Today it attracts only 0.6% of the total population to its broadcasts. The main Afrikaans radio service was renamed Radio Sonder Grense (literally 'Radio Without Borders') in 1995 and has enjoyed greater success with the transition.

By contrast, SABC Radio's competitors, like Primedia-owned Radio 702, Cape Talk and 94.7 Highveld Stereo have grown steadily in audience and revenue, while other stations such as the black-owned and focused YFM and Kaya FM have also attracted black audiences.

Programming policy

As of 12 May 2016, the SABC has implemented a policy to promote local content. 90% of all music played on the broadcaster's 18 radio stations will be sourced from local artists with a focus on kwaito, jazz, reggae and gospel genres.[35]

Station list

Station Language Former name Launch date Website Webcast
SAfm English "A" Service; Radio South Africa 1936 www.safm.co.za [1]
5FM English Springbok Radio 1975 www.5fm.co.za [2]
Metro FM English Radio Metro 1986 www.metrofm.co.za [3]
Radio 2000 English Radio South Africa 1986 www.radio2000.co.za
Good Hope FM English and Afrikaans Radio Good Hope 1965 www.goodhopefm.co.za [5]
RSG Afrikaans "B" Service; Radio Suid-Afrika; Afrikaans Stereo 1937 www.rsg.co.za [6]
Ukhozi FM Zulu Radio Zulu 1960 www.ukhozifm.co.za [7]
Umhlobo Wenene FM Xhosa Radio Xhosa (& Radio Transkei) 1960
Lesedi FM Southern Sotho Radio Sesotho 1960 www.lesedifm.co.za
Thobela FM Northern Sotho Radio Lebowa 1960 www.thobelafm.co.za
Motsweding FM Tswana Radio Setswana (& Radio Mmbatho) 1962 www.motswedingfm.co.za
Phalaphala FM Venda Radio Venda (& Radio Thohoyandou) 1965 www.phalaphalafm.co.za
Munghana Lonene FM Tsonga Radio XiTsonga 1965 www.munghanalonenefm.co.za
Ligwalagwala FM Swazi Radio Swazi 1982 www.ligwalagwalafm.co.za
iKwekwezi FM Ndebele Radio Ndebele 1983 www.ikwekwezifm.co.za
tru fm English and Xhosa Radio Ciskei; CKI FM 1983 www.trufm.co.za
Lotus FM English and Hindi (for
the Indian
community)
Radio Lotus 1983 www.lotusfm.co.za [17]
X-K FM !Xu and Khwe 2000

Television

Early history (1975–1995)

 
SABC logo, used from 1976 to 1996

In 1975, after years of controversy over the introduction of television, the SABC was finally allowed to introduce a colour TV service, which began experimental broadcasts in the main cities on 5 May 1975, before the service went nationwide on 6 January 1976. Initially, the TV service was funded entirely through a licence fee just like the UK, but began advertising in 1978. The SABC (both Television and Radio) is still partly funded by the licence fee (currently R250 a year).

The service initially broadcast only in English and Afrikaans, with an emphasis on religious programming on Sundays.[36] A local soap opera, The Villagers, set on a gold mine, was well received while other local productions like The Dingleys were panned as amateurish.[37]

The majority of acquired programming on South African television came from the United States, although owing to their opposition to apartheid, some production companies stopped selling programmes to the country.[38] The British actors' union Equity had already started a boycott of programme sales to South Africa, which was not lifted until 1993.[39] However, the Thames Television police drama series The Sweeney and Van der Valk, were briefly shown on SABC TV,[40] as was the original version of Thunderbirds.[37]

Many imported programmes were dubbed into Afrikaans and other indigenous languages, but in 1985, in order to accommodate English speakers, the SABC began to simulcast the original-language audio of series on an FM radio service called Radio 2000, allowing viewers to watch them in the original language; the first English-language series to be simulcast was Miami Vice.[41]

SABC TV also produced lavish musical shows featuring the most popular South African composers, solo musicians, bands and orchestras. For example, the pianist and composer, Charles Segal, was given a half-hour special show: The Music of Charles Segal, where a selection of his music was performed by various local artists, such as Zane Adams, SABC Orchestra and others. However, it also broadcast pop music series like Pop Shop, which consisted of overseas and local music, and Double Track, which consisted entirely of local acts.[42]

With a limited budget, early programming aimed at children tended to be quite innovative, and programmes such as the Afrikaans-language puppet shows Haas Das se Nuus Kas and Oscar in Asblikfontein are still fondly remembered by many.[43]

On 1 January 1981, two services were introduced, TV2 broadcasting in Zulu and Xhosa and TV3 broadcasting in Sotho and Tswana, both targeted at a black urban audience.[44] The main channel, then called TV1, was divided evenly between English and Afrikaans, as before. In 1986, a new service called TV4 was introduced, carrying sports and entertainment programming, taking over the frequencies used by TV2 and TV3, which then had to end broadcasting at 21:00.[45]

In 1991, TV2, TV3 and TV4 were combined into a new service called CCV (Contemporary Community Values).[46] A third channel was introduced known as TSS, or TopSport Surplus, TopSport being the brand name for the SABC's sport coverage, but this was replaced by NNTV (National Network TV), an educational, non-commercial channel, in 1993.[47]

Competition and restructuring

In 1986, the SABC's monopoly on the television industry was challenged by the launch of a subscription-based service known as M-Net, which was backed by a consortium of newspaper publishers. This service was prohibited from broadcasting its own news programmes, which were still the preserve of the SABC. Direct-to-home satellite television in South Africa began when M-Net's parent company, Multichoice, launched its first-in-the-world digital satellite TV service, DStv, in 1995. At the time, SABC TV channels, were not broadcast on this network, but agreements were later reached that allowed DStv to carry the SABC channels as well. In 1998, the SABC's dominance of free-to-air terrestrial television was further eroded by the launch of the first free-to-air private TV channel, e.tv.

In 1996, the SABC reorganised its three TV channels with the aim of making them more representative of the various cultural groups.[48] These new channels were called SABC 1, SABC 2 and SABC 3. The SABC also absorbed the Bop TV channel of the former Bophuthatswana bantustan.[49]

SABC TV programmes in Afrikaans and other languages are now subtitled in English, but programmes in English are not usually subtitled in other languages, the perception being that all South Africans can understand English.[50] Previously, subtitling was confined to productions like operas and operettas.[51] It was not used on TV1, on the assumption that most viewers understood both Afrikaans and English,[52] nor on CCV, despite presenters using two or more different languages during a single programme.[53]

New services

In 2005, the SABC announced proposed the creation of two complementary regional television channels, SABC4 and SABC5, to emphasise indigenous languages.[54] SABC4, based in Mafikeng, was to be broadcast in Tswana, Sesotho, Pedi, Tsonga, Venda, and Afrikaans, to the northern provinces of the country, while SABC5, based in Cape Town, was to broadcast in Xhosa, Zulu, Ndebele, and Swazi, as well as Afrikaans, to the southern provinces. Unlike other SABC TV services, SABC4 and SABC5 were not to be available via satellite.[55] Apart from soundbites on news or current affairs programmes, no English-language programming would be shown on either channel.[56] However, the plans fell through and in 2015, the SABC stated that it would launch two new channels, SABC News and SABC Encore.[57]

In 2013, the SABC announced plans to launch a new news channel, SABC News, to be available on DStv, instead of waiting for the introduction of digital terrestrial television.[58]

In 2015, SABC partnered up with online TV platform Tuluntulu to launch two more channels which were SABC Education and SABC Children.

According to the SABC, the factors which are considered when deciding how much time a language gets on television are the following: how many home language speakers exist in the coverage area of a channel; the geographical spread of the language; the extent to which members of a language community are able to understand other languages; the extent of marginalisation of a language; the extent to which the language is understood by other South Africans; and whether there is available content that uses the language.[59] SABC currently plans to launch five channels, the four of them being language-targeted:[60]

SABC TV has an audience of over 30 million.[61] SABC1 reaches 89% of the public, SABC2 reaches 91% of the public, and SABC3 reaches 77% of the public, according to the broadcaster.[59] The SABC has 18 radio stations, which have more than 25 million weekly listeners.[61]

In 2018, SABC scrapped part of the plans from 2015 and downsized their DTT plans from 18 TV channels to just 9 TV channels due to financial woes. The SABC have SABC 1-3 and News falling under the 9 channels with the rest being:

  • A sports channel
  • A health channel
  • A history channel
  • A parliamentary channel
  • A education channel

All these channels needed funding in order to materialize and without it the channels remain a dream. All of these channels will be craft through partnerships and a group executive at the SABC mentioned that if they are able to get the sports channel running in SD then they may be able to get a ninth channel which is history.[62]

On 4 May 2020 amidst the coronavirus outbreak, the SABC launched its educational channel called SABC Education through DTT and YouTube with additional platforms added soon.[63]

SABC Encore shut down from the end of May apparently MultiChoice and SABC agreement for the channel ended back in 2018 giving the channel a 2-year open window. The SABC said they were exploring other the idea of continuing the channel through another platform.

In November 2020, SABC signed a channel and radio distribution agreement with Telkom for their new streaming service.[64]

SABC launched its own streaming service called SABC Plus on 17 November 2022 which is similar to BBC iPlayer[65][66]

Reception outside South Africa

Botswana, Lesotho and Eswatini

SABC television via satellite had also been widely available in neighbouring Lesotho and Eswatini, as well as Botswana.[67] After complaints from rights holders in Botswana, SABC encrypted its TV channels, thereby cutting off viewers in those countries.[68]

Namibia

Until 1979, the SABC operated broadcasting services in Namibia, which was then under South African rule, but in that year, these were transferred to the South West African Broadcasting Corporation (SWABC).[69] However, the SWABC retained technical personnel from the SABC, and a number of its programmes were prepared at the SABC's studios in Johannesburg before being dispatched to Windhoek for transmission.[70]

The SABC also helped the SWABC to establish a television service in 1981.[71] This comprised a mix of programming in English, Afrikaans and German, 90 per cent of which came from or via the SABC.[72] Programmes were shown locally a week after South Africa.[73] The SWABC received SABC TV programming (which it recorded, edited and rebroadcast) first by using a microwave link, and later via an Intelsat satellite link.[74] The SWABC became the Namibian Broadcasting Corporation (NBC) after the country's independence in 1990.

However, Walvis Bay, an enclave of South Africa in Namibia until 1994, received the SABC's TV1 on a low-power repeater, which was broadcast live via Intelsat from 1986.[73]

Mozambique

The cable company TV Cabo (Visabeira) offered SABC 1, SABC 3 and Bop TV in its first few years of operation.[75] These alongside e.tv were removed due to rights issues, in a situation similar to what would happen in Botswana ten years later, being replaced by other channels from the DStv bouquet, in August 2003,[76] causing uproar from subscribers.[77][78]

International services

In 1998, the SABC began to broadcast two TV channels to the rest of Africa: SABC Africa, a news service, and Africa 2 Africa, entertainment programming from South Africa and other African countries, via DStv.[79] In 2003, Africa 2 Africa was merged with SABC Africa to create a hybrid service, drawing programming from both sources.[80] SABC Africa closed in August 2008 after the SABC's contract with DStv was not renewed.[81] In 2007, the SABC launched a 24-hour international news channel, SABC News International, but closed in 2010.[82]

Criticisms and controversies

Accusations of pro-ANC bias

The SABC has been accused of being a government and ruling party mouthpiece, particularly in the lead-up to the 2014 South African elections,[83][84] particularly after it refused to air the campaign adverts of various opposition parties,[85][86] and again in 2015 when it censored the video feeds of the 2015 State of the Nation address that portrayed the ANC and President Jacob Zuma in a negative light.[87] In 2015, Minister of Communications, Faith Muthambi reinforced the notion that the SABC was a state-owned company, and therefore, subject to control by the Department of Communications and the ruling party.[88]

In August 2005, the SABC came under heavy fire from independent media and the public for failing to broadcast footage in which deputy president Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka was booed offstage by members of the ANC Youth League, who were showing support for the newly axed ex-deputy president, Jacob Zuma.[89]

Rival broadcaster eTV publicly accused SABC of 'biased reporting' for failing to show the video footage of the humiliated deputy president. Snuki Zikalala, Head of News and ex-ANC spokesperson retorted that their cameraman had not been present at the meeting. This claim was later established to be false when eTV footage was released which showed an SABC cameraman filming the incident.[90]

The SABC's government connections also came under scrutiny when, in April 2005, Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe was interviewed live by Zikalala, who is a former ANC political commissar.[91] The interview was deemed by the public to have sidestepped 'critical issues', and to have avoided difficult questions regarding Mugabe's radical land-reform policies and human rights violations.

Accusations of censorship

In May 2006, the SABC was accused of self-censorship when it decided not to air a documentary on South African president Thabo Mbeki, and in early June 2006, the news organisation requested that the producers (from Daylight Films) not speak about it. This was widely criticised by independent media groups.[92] In response, the International Freedom of Expression Exchange issued an alert concerning the SABC's apparent trend toward self-censorship.[93]

In June 2006, the International Federation of Journalists denounced the cancelling of the Thabo Mbeki documentary, citing "self-censorship" and "politically-influenced managers".[94]

Also in June 2006, SAfm host John Perlman disclosed on air that the SABC had created a blacklist of commentators.[95] A commission of inquiry was created by SABC CEO Dali Mpofu to investigate the allegations that individuals had been blacklisted at the behest of Zikalala.[96][97] Perlman eventually resigned from SAfm, and the broadcaster came under heavy criticism from free media advocates.

Shortly before the ANC's 2012 elective conference in Mangaung, the board of the SABC handed control of news, television, radio and sport to COO Hlaudi Motsoeneng. The board's decision was interpreted by some at the SABC as a calculated attempt to ensure that an ANC faction close to President Jacob Zuma was given positive coverage.[98] During a press conference held by the SABC on 6 December 2012, to explain why it had prevented three journalists from participating in a discussion on how the media would cover the ANC's elective conference in Manguang, Hlaudi Motsoeneng said that whenever the ANC is discussed on the SABC an ANC party representative must be present.

In April 2014, journalists were warned by SABC chairperson, Ellen Zandile Tshabalala, that their phones were being wiretapped by the NIA, and reminded them to be loyal to the ANC ruling party. When challenged on the matter, Tshabalala insisted that her comments had been taken out of context. The scandal erupted at the same time that the DA official opposition accused the SABC of censorship[99] when they stopped airing a television advert that referred to the ongoing Nkandlagate scandal.

In February 2015, the SABC was accused of censoring video and audio feeds of the State of the Nation address in Parliament, after opposition party EFF was forcefully ejected by armed plain-clothes policemen after interrupting the President's speech. Footage of opposition party DA walking out in protest over the presence of the armed personnel was also censored. This was in addition to the presence of a signal-jamming device that prevented journalists and MP's from being able to use their mobile devices to post news online.[100]

The SABC was criticised for banning footage that showed protests and demonstrations in the run-up to the 2016 local elections.[101] In July 2016, eight SABC journalists challenged the broadcaster's decision to censor news items, and were dismissed from the organisation.[102][103] A subsequent hearing at the Labour Court found the dismissals were unlawful and ordered the reinstatement of four of the full-time SABC employees.[104] During this period the eight journalists, including Suna Venter, were subjected to a number of death threats and other forms of intimidation.[105]

In October 2016,[106] the South African parliament began investigating corruption allegations against SABC and its Group Executive of Corporate Affairs - Hlaudi Motsoeneng.[107] On 12 December, the Western Cape High Court ruled that Motsoeneng be removed from office effective immediately.[108]

SABC Encore's launch party

At the channel's launch event, the COO of SABC at the time used that event to rant about making pay-TV platforms like MultiChoice's DStv pay for SABC 1-3 and how the SABC is run by a 'blind person'. He also took the stage to call out those with their 'lack of knowledge' over the deal the public broadcaster has for the channel alongside SABC News.[109]

See also

References

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External links

  • Official website
  • IOL – SABC gags Mbeki 'unauthorised' documentary

sabc, other, uses, disambiguation, south, african, broadcasting, corporation, public, broadcaster, south, africa, provides, radio, stations, well, television, broadcasts, general, public, largest, south, africa, state, owned, enterprises, south, african, broad. For other uses see SABC disambiguation The South African Broadcasting Corporation SABC is the public broadcaster in South Africa and provides 19 radio stations AM FM as well as six television broadcasts to the general public 3 It is one of the largest of South Africa s state owned enterprises South African Broadcasting CorporationLogo used since 2003SABC headquarters in Uitsaaisentrum JohannesburgTypeTerrestrial television and radio networkCountry South AfricaAvailability South Africa Botswana Eswatini Lesotho Mozambique Namibia ZimbabweFounded1 August 1936 86 years ago 1936 08 01 by the Government of South AfricaMottoVuka Sizwe Nation Arise Everywhere For Everyone Always RevenueR 6 6 billion 2017 18 FY 1 Net incomeR 622 million loss 2017 18 FY 1 Broadcast area South AfricaOwnerGovernment of South AfricaKey peopleBlessing Mahlangu chairman 2 Madoda Mxakwe 2 CEO Launch date1936 radio 1976 television Digital channel s 16 9TelevisionSABC 1 SABC 2 SABC 3 SABC NEWS SABC Education SABC Children SABC Sport SABC EncoreRadio19 radio stationsOfficial websitewww wbr sabc wbr co wbr za wbr sabc wbr Opposition politicians and civil society often criticise the SABC accusing it of being a mouthpiece for whichever political party is in majority power thus currently the ruling African National Congress during the apartheid era it was accused of playing the same role for the National Party government 4 Contents 1 Company history 1 1 Early years 1 2 Recent history 1 3 Leaders 2 Chief Executive Officer CEO 3 Radio 3 1 Establishment 3 2 Springbok Radio 3 3 SABC News Service 3 4 SABC Symphony Orchestra 3 5 Regional radio 3 6 Popular music 3 7 1996 restructuring 3 8 Programming policy 3 9 Station list 4 Television 4 1 Early history 1975 1995 4 2 Competition and restructuring 4 3 New services 5 Reception outside South Africa 5 1 Botswana Lesotho and Eswatini 5 2 Namibia 5 3 Mozambique 6 International services 7 Criticisms and controversies 7 1 Accusations of pro ANC bias 7 2 Accusations of censorship 7 3 SABC Encore s launch party 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksCompany history EditEarly years Edit Radio broadcasting in South Africa began in 1923 under the auspices of South African Railways before three radio services were licensed the Association of Scientific and Technical Societies AS amp TS in Johannesburg the Cape Peninsular Publicity Association in Cape Town and the Durban Corporation which began broadcasting in 1924 5 These merged into the African Broadcasting Company in 1927 owned by I W Schlesinger a wealthy businessman but on 1 August 1936 they were sold to the SABC established that year through an Act of Parliament 6 The SABC took over the African Broadcasting Company s staff and assets It maintained a state monopoly on radio until the launch in December 1979 of Capital Radio 604 then Radio 702 in 1980 7 Although the subscription funded television service M Net launched in 1986 the SABC had a monopoly on free to air television until the launch of e tv in 1998 During National Party rule from 1948 it came under increasing accusations of being biased towards the ruling party At one time most of its senior management were members of the Broederbond the Afrikaner secret society and later from institutions like Stellenbosch University The SABC was a radio service until the introduction of television in 1976 There were three main SABC radio stations the English Service later known as Radio South Africa the Afrikaans Service later known as Radio Suid Afrika and Afrikaans Stereo and the commercial station Springbok Radio 8 Programmes on the English and Afrikaans services mainly consisted of news plays such as The Forsyte Saga Story of an African Farm and The Summons written and produced in South Africa serious talk shows BBC radio shows children s programmes such as Sound Box and light music featuring South African orchestras arrangers musicians and singers Accomplished musicians such as pianist and composer Charles Segal featured on all three stations regularly in shows like Piano Playtime Accordionist Nico Carstens was a regular on the Afrikaans programmes 9 Recent history Edit SABC offices in Sea Point Cape Town On 4 February 1996 two years after the ANC came to power the SABC reorganised its three TV channels so as to be more representative of different language groups 10 This resulted in the downgrading of Afrikaans by reducing its airtime from 50 to 15 a move that alienated many Afrikaans speakers 11 The SABC has since been accused of favouring the ruling ANC party mostly in news It remains dominant in the broadcast media Criticism intensified around 2003 2005 when it was accused of a wide range of shortcomings including self censorship lack of objectivity and selective news coverage On 20 October 2020 SABC and the government were in discussion to get TV and streaming providers in South Africa to collect TV licence on their behalf 12 On 27 March 2021 SABC and eMedia Investments expanded their partnership which allowed OpenView customers to receive 3 additional channels as well as their 19 radio stations 13 Leaders Edit Director General of the SABC Surname Name From ToCaprara Rene Silvio 1936 1948Roos Gideon Daniel 1948 1959Meyer Pieter Johannes 1959 1980de Villiers Steve 1980 1983Eksteen Riaan 1983 1988Harmse Wynand 1988 1994Chairman of the SABC Board Surname Name From ToMatsepe Casaburri Ivy Florence 1994 1996Zulu Paulus 1996 2000Maphai Thabane Vincent 2000 2003Funde Sonwabo Eddie 2003 2008Mkhonza Khanyi 2008 2009Charnley Irene 2009 2009Ngubane Baldwin Sipho 2010 2013Tshabalala Zandile Ellen 2013 2014Maguvhe Mbulaheni Obert 2014 2017Makhathini Bongumusa Emmanuel 2017Chief Executive Officer CEO EditTerm Name1994 1998 Sisulu Z 1998 2000 Mbatha H 2000 2000 Khuzwayo C 2000 2005 Matlare P 2002 2008 Mpofu D 2008 2009 Mampone G 2009 2011 Mokoetle S 2011 2014 Mokhobo L 2014 2015 Motsoeneng H 2015 2015 Matlala F 2015 2016 Matthews J 2017 present Madoda M Radio EditEstablishment Edit Following its establishment in 1936 the SABC established services in what were then the country s official languages English and Afrikaans with the Afrikaans service being established in 1937 14 Broadcasts in languages such as Zulu Xhosa Sesotho and Tswana followed in 1940 7 Springbok Radio Edit Springbok Radio the SABC s first commercial radio service started broadcasting on 1 May 1950 15 Bilingual in English and Afrikaans it broadcast from the Johannesburg Centre for 113 1 2 hours a week 16 The service proved to be so popular with advertisers that at the time of its launch commercial time had been booked well in advance 6 The station featured a wide variety of programming such as morning talk and news game shows soap operas like Basis Bravo 15 children s programming music request programmes top ten music talent shows and other musical entertainment One popular Saturday noontime comedy show was Telefun Time whose hosts would phone various people and conjure up situation comedy a similar brand of humour to the films of Leon Schuster 17 By 1985 Springbok Radio was operating at a heavy loss 18 After losing many listeners with the handing over of its shortwave frequencies to Radio 5 and facing competition from television it ceased broadcasting on 31 December 1985 19 SABC News Service Edit The News Service was established in June 1950 replacing the programmes of the BBC 20 Although this was because the BBC broadcasts were seen as giving a British viewpoint of current affairs there were also concerns that the SABC service would become overly pro government or Our Master s Voice 21 By 1968 it had over 100 full time reporters in the main cities and local correspondents all over the country with overseas news provided by Reuters AFP AP and UPI 22 There was a News Film Unit which prior to television in 1976 produced films for news agencies and television organisations 23 SABC Symphony Orchestra Edit The SABC Symphony Orchestra has its origins in its three studio ensembles in Johannesburg Durban and Cape Town and the Municipal Orchestra of the Johannesburg City Council When the SABC centralised its broadcasting in Johannesburg the future of the three ensembles were in doubt but at the same time the Municipal Orchestra of the Johannesburg City Council had been disbanded 24 The SABC was able to form an orchestra of 80 musicians from these groupings in 1954 and while its main base was at the Johannesburg City Hall it would tour the country 25 The orchestra would be led for many years by the SABC s head of music Anton Hartman but had other conductors as well such as Francesco Mander and Edgar Cree 26 There were also international composers such as Igor Stravinsky 27 The SABC Junior Orchestra was also created and began in February 1966 under Walter Mony 28 Regional radio Edit Regional commercial FM music stations were started in the 1960s Station Launch date Replaced byRadio Highveld 1964 947Radio Good Hope 1965 Good Hope FMRadio Port Natal 1967 East Coast RadioRadio Jacaranda 1986 Jacaranda FMRadio Oranje 1986 OFMRadio Algoa 1986 Algoa FMPopular music Edit Following the establishment of a republic and withdrawal from the Commonwealth in 1961 the Afrikaners goal was to promote their culture and so at first the SABC s choice of popular music reflected the National Party government s initial conservatism especially on the Afrikaans channel with musicians such as Nico Carstens However Carstens was also ostracised by the SABC as his music was influenced by the Coloured and Malay communities of Cape Town 29 Eventually musicians broke through the barrier when the young English speaking Jewish musician and composer Charles Segal collaborated with the older Afrikaans lyric writer Anton Dewaal to write songs 30 Segal s songs like Die Ou Kalahari became highly popular with the Afrikaans speaking public 31 However there was tight censorship over all broadcasts particularly of pop music with for example the music of the Beatles being banned by the SABC between 1966 and March 1971 32 In 1966 the SABC established an external service known as Radio RSA which broadcast in English Swahili French Portuguese Dutch and German In 1969 the SABC held a national contest to find theme music for the service This contest was won by the popular South African pianist and composer Charles Segal and co writer Dorothy Arenson Their composition Carousel remained the theme song for Radio RSA until 1992 when it was replaced by Channel Africa 33 In 1986 the SABC ran a competition to promote South African music Each of the 15 radio stations represented by an artist entered a song to compete for the Song for South Africa in the National Song Festival The finals were broadcast live on television The Radio Port Natal submission won the competition with the Don Clarke song Sanbonani performed by P J Powers and Hotline 34 1996 restructuring Edit In 1996 the SABC carried out a significant restructuring of their services The main English language radio service became SAfm The new service after some initial faltering soon developed a respectable listenership and was regarded as a flagship for the new democracy However government interference in the state broadcaster in 2003 saw further changes to SAfm which reversed the growth and put it in rapid decline once more citation needed Today it attracts only 0 6 of the total population to its broadcasts The main Afrikaans radio service was renamed Radio Sonder Grense literally Radio Without Borders in 1995 and has enjoyed greater success with the transition By contrast SABC Radio s competitors like Primedia owned Radio 702 Cape Talk and 94 7 Highveld Stereo have grown steadily in audience and revenue while other stations such as the black owned and focused YFM and Kaya FM have also attracted black audiences Programming policy Edit As of 12 May 2016 the SABC has implemented a policy to promote local content 90 of all music played on the broadcaster s 18 radio stations will be sourced from local artists with a focus on kwaito jazz reggae and gospel genres 35 Station list Edit Station Language Former name Launch date Website WebcastSAfm English A Service Radio South Africa 1936 www safm co za 1 5FM English Springbok Radio 1975 www 5fm co za 2 Metro FM English Radio Metro 1986 www metrofm co za 3 Radio 2000 English Radio South Africa 1986 www radio2000 co za 4 Good Hope FM English and Afrikaans Radio Good Hope 1965 www goodhopefm co za 5 RSG Afrikaans B Service Radio Suid Afrika Afrikaans Stereo 1937 www rsg co za 6 Ukhozi FM Zulu Radio Zulu 1960 www ukhozifm co za 7 Umhlobo Wenene FM Xhosa Radio Xhosa amp Radio Transkei 1960 www uwfm co za 8 Lesedi FM Southern Sotho Radio Sesotho 1960 www lesedifm co za 9 Thobela FM Northern Sotho Radio Lebowa 1960 www thobelafm co za 10 Motsweding FM Tswana Radio Setswana amp Radio Mmbatho 1962 www motswedingfm co za 11 Phalaphala FM Venda Radio Venda amp Radio Thohoyandou 1965 www phalaphalafm co za 12 Munghana Lonene FM Tsonga Radio XiTsonga 1965 www munghanalonenefm co za 13 Ligwalagwala FM Swazi Radio Swazi 1982 www ligwalagwalafm co za 14 iKwekwezi FM Ndebele Radio Ndebele 1983 www ikwekwezifm co za 15 tru fm English and Xhosa Radio Ciskei CKI FM 1983 www trufm co za 16 Lotus FM English and Hindi forthe Indiancommunity Radio Lotus 1983 www lotusfm co za 17 X K FM Xu and Khwe 2000 18 Television EditEarly history 1975 1995 Edit SABC logo used from 1976 to 1996 In 1975 after years of controversy over the introduction of television the SABC was finally allowed to introduce a colour TV service which began experimental broadcasts in the main cities on 5 May 1975 before the service went nationwide on 6 January 1976 Initially the TV service was funded entirely through a licence fee just like the UK but began advertising in 1978 The SABC both Television and Radio is still partly funded by the licence fee currently R250 a year The service initially broadcast only in English and Afrikaans with an emphasis on religious programming on Sundays 36 A local soap opera The Villagers set on a gold mine was well received while other local productions like The Dingleys were panned as amateurish 37 The majority of acquired programming on South African television came from the United States although owing to their opposition to apartheid some production companies stopped selling programmes to the country 38 The British actors union Equity had already started a boycott of programme sales to South Africa which was not lifted until 1993 39 However the Thames Television police drama series The Sweeney and Van der Valk were briefly shown on SABC TV 40 as was the original version of Thunderbirds 37 Many imported programmes were dubbed into Afrikaans and other indigenous languages but in 1985 in order to accommodate English speakers the SABC began to simulcast the original language audio of series on an FM radio service called Radio 2000 allowing viewers to watch them in the original language the first English language series to be simulcast was Miami Vice 41 SABC TV also produced lavish musical shows featuring the most popular South African composers solo musicians bands and orchestras For example the pianist and composer Charles Segal was given a half hour special show The Music of Charles Segal where a selection of his music was performed by various local artists such as Zane Adams SABC Orchestra and others However it also broadcast pop music series like Pop Shop which consisted of overseas and local music and Double Track which consisted entirely of local acts 42 With a limited budget early programming aimed at children tended to be quite innovative and programmes such as the Afrikaans language puppet shows Haas Das se Nuus Kas and Oscar in Asblikfontein are still fondly remembered by many 43 On 1 January 1981 two services were introduced TV2 broadcasting in Zulu and Xhosa and TV3 broadcasting in Sotho and Tswana both targeted at a black urban audience 44 The main channel then called TV1 was divided evenly between English and Afrikaans as before In 1986 a new service called TV4 was introduced carrying sports and entertainment programming taking over the frequencies used by TV2 and TV3 which then had to end broadcasting at 21 00 45 In 1991 TV2 TV3 and TV4 were combined into a new service called CCV Contemporary Community Values 46 A third channel was introduced known as TSS or TopSport Surplus TopSport being the brand name for the SABC s sport coverage but this was replaced by NNTV National Network TV an educational non commercial channel in 1993 47 Competition and restructuring Edit In 1986 the SABC s monopoly on the television industry was challenged by the launch of a subscription based service known as M Net which was backed by a consortium of newspaper publishers This service was prohibited from broadcasting its own news programmes which were still the preserve of the SABC Direct to home satellite television in South Africa began when M Net s parent company Multichoice launched its first in the world digital satellite TV service DStv in 1995 At the time SABC TV channels were not broadcast on this network but agreements were later reached that allowed DStv to carry the SABC channels as well In 1998 the SABC s dominance of free to air terrestrial television was further eroded by the launch of the first free to air private TV channel e tv In 1996 the SABC reorganised its three TV channels with the aim of making them more representative of the various cultural groups 48 These new channels were called SABC 1 SABC 2 and SABC 3 The SABC also absorbed the Bop TV channel of the former Bophuthatswana bantustan 49 SABC TV programmes in Afrikaans and other languages are now subtitled in English but programmes in English are not usually subtitled in other languages the perception being that all South Africans can understand English 50 Previously subtitling was confined to productions like operas and operettas 51 It was not used on TV1 on the assumption that most viewers understood both Afrikaans and English 52 nor on CCV despite presenters using two or more different languages during a single programme 53 New services Edit In 2005 the SABC announced proposed the creation of two complementary regional television channels SABC4 and SABC5 to emphasise indigenous languages 54 SABC4 based in Mafikeng was to be broadcast in Tswana Sesotho Pedi Tsonga Venda and Afrikaans to the northern provinces of the country while SABC5 based in Cape Town was to broadcast in Xhosa Zulu Ndebele and Swazi as well as Afrikaans to the southern provinces Unlike other SABC TV services SABC4 and SABC5 were not to be available via satellite 55 Apart from soundbites on news or current affairs programmes no English language programming would be shown on either channel 56 However the plans fell through and in 2015 the SABC stated that it would launch two new channels SABC News and SABC Encore 57 In 2013 the SABC announced plans to launch a new news channel SABC News to be available on DStv instead of waiting for the introduction of digital terrestrial television 58 In 2015 SABC partnered up with online TV platform Tuluntulu to launch two more channels which were SABC Education and SABC Children According to the SABC the factors which are considered when deciding how much time a language gets on television are the following how many home language speakers exist in the coverage area of a channel the geographical spread of the language the extent to which members of a language community are able to understand other languages the extent of marginalisation of a language the extent to which the language is understood by other South Africans and whether there is available content that uses the language 59 SABC currently plans to launch five channels the four of them being language targeted 60 A channel targeting Tswana Pedi and Sotho speakers A channel targeting Zulu Xhosa Swazi and Ndebele speakers A channel targeting Tsonga and Venda speakers A channel targeting Afrikaans speakers A SABC sports channelSABC TV has an audience of over 30 million 61 SABC1 reaches 89 of the public SABC2 reaches 91 of the public and SABC3 reaches 77 of the public according to the broadcaster 59 The SABC has 18 radio stations which have more than 25 million weekly listeners 61 In 2018 SABC scrapped part of the plans from 2015 and downsized their DTT plans from 18 TV channels to just 9 TV channels due to financial woes The SABC have SABC 1 3 and News falling under the 9 channels with the rest being A sports channel A health channel A history channel A parliamentary channel A education channelAll these channels needed funding in order to materialize and without it the channels remain a dream All of these channels will be craft through partnerships and a group executive at the SABC mentioned that if they are able to get the sports channel running in SD then they may be able to get a ninth channel which is history 62 On 4 May 2020 amidst the coronavirus outbreak the SABC launched its educational channel called SABC Education through DTT and YouTube with additional platforms added soon 63 SABC Encore shut down from the end of May apparently MultiChoice and SABC agreement for the channel ended back in 2018 giving the channel a 2 year open window The SABC said they were exploring other the idea of continuing the channel through another platform In November 2020 SABC signed a channel and radio distribution agreement with Telkom for their new streaming service 64 SABC launched its own streaming service called SABC Plus on 17 November 2022 which is similar to BBC iPlayer 65 66 Reception outside South Africa EditBotswana Lesotho and Eswatini Edit SABC television via satellite had also been widely available in neighbouring Lesotho and Eswatini as well as Botswana 67 After complaints from rights holders in Botswana SABC encrypted its TV channels thereby cutting off viewers in those countries 68 Namibia Edit Until 1979 the SABC operated broadcasting services in Namibia which was then under South African rule but in that year these were transferred to the South West African Broadcasting Corporation SWABC 69 However the SWABC retained technical personnel from the SABC and a number of its programmes were prepared at the SABC s studios in Johannesburg before being dispatched to Windhoek for transmission 70 The SABC also helped the SWABC to establish a television service in 1981 71 This comprised a mix of programming in English Afrikaans and German 90 per cent of which came from or via the SABC 72 Programmes were shown locally a week after South Africa 73 The SWABC received SABC TV programming which it recorded edited and rebroadcast first by using a microwave link and later via an Intelsat satellite link 74 The SWABC became the Namibian Broadcasting Corporation NBC after the country s independence in 1990 However Walvis Bay an enclave of South Africa in Namibia until 1994 received the SABC s TV1 on a low power repeater which was broadcast live via Intelsat from 1986 73 Mozambique Edit The cable company TV Cabo Visabeira offered SABC 1 SABC 3 and Bop TV in its first few years of operation 75 These alongside e tv were removed due to rights issues in a situation similar to what would happen in Botswana ten years later being replaced by other channels from the DStv bouquet in August 2003 76 causing uproar from subscribers 77 78 International services EditIn 1998 the SABC began to broadcast two TV channels to the rest of Africa SABC Africa a news service and Africa 2 Africa entertainment programming from South Africa and other African countries via DStv 79 In 2003 Africa 2 Africa was merged with SABC Africa to create a hybrid service drawing programming from both sources 80 SABC Africa closed in August 2008 after the SABC s contract with DStv was not renewed 81 In 2007 the SABC launched a 24 hour international news channel SABC News International but closed in 2010 82 Criticisms and controversies EditAccusations of pro ANC bias Edit The SABC has been accused of being a government and ruling party mouthpiece particularly in the lead up to the 2014 South African elections 83 84 particularly after it refused to air the campaign adverts of various opposition parties 85 86 and again in 2015 when it censored the video feeds of the 2015 State of the Nation address that portrayed the ANC and President Jacob Zuma in a negative light 87 In 2015 Minister of Communications Faith Muthambi reinforced the notion that the SABC was a state owned company and therefore subject to control by the Department of Communications and the ruling party 88 In August 2005 the SABC came under heavy fire from independent media and the public for failing to broadcast footage in which deputy president Phumzile Mlambo Ngcuka was booed offstage by members of the ANC Youth League who were showing support for the newly axed ex deputy president Jacob Zuma 89 Rival broadcaster eTV publicly accused SABC of biased reporting for failing to show the video footage of the humiliated deputy president Snuki Zikalala Head of News and ex ANC spokesperson retorted that their cameraman had not been present at the meeting This claim was later established to be false when eTV footage was released which showed an SABC cameraman filming the incident 90 The SABC s government connections also came under scrutiny when in April 2005 Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe was interviewed live by Zikalala who is a former ANC political commissar 91 The interview was deemed by the public to have sidestepped critical issues and to have avoided difficult questions regarding Mugabe s radical land reform policies and human rights violations Accusations of censorship Edit In May 2006 the SABC was accused of self censorship when it decided not to air a documentary on South African president Thabo Mbeki and in early June 2006 the news organisation requested that the producers from Daylight Films not speak about it This was widely criticised by independent media groups 92 In response the International Freedom of Expression Exchange issued an alert concerning the SABC s apparent trend toward self censorship 93 In June 2006 the International Federation of Journalists denounced the cancelling of the Thabo Mbeki documentary citing self censorship and politically influenced managers 94 Also in June 2006 SAfm host John Perlman disclosed on air that the SABC had created a blacklist of commentators 95 A commission of inquiry was created by SABC CEO Dali Mpofu to investigate the allegations that individuals had been blacklisted at the behest of Zikalala 96 97 Perlman eventually resigned from SAfm and the broadcaster came under heavy criticism from free media advocates Shortly before the ANC s 2012 elective conference in Mangaung the board of the SABC handed control of news television radio and sport to COO Hlaudi Motsoeneng The board s decision was interpreted by some at the SABC as a calculated attempt to ensure that an ANC faction close to President Jacob Zuma was given positive coverage 98 During a press conference held by the SABC on 6 December 2012 to explain why it had prevented three journalists from participating in a discussion on how the media would cover the ANC s elective conference in Manguang Hlaudi Motsoeneng said that whenever the ANC is discussed on the SABC an ANC party representative must be present In April 2014 journalists were warned by SABC chairperson Ellen Zandile Tshabalala that their phones were being wiretapped by the NIA and reminded them to be loyal to the ANC ruling party When challenged on the matter Tshabalala insisted that her comments had been taken out of context The scandal erupted at the same time that the DA official opposition accused the SABC of censorship 99 when they stopped airing a television advert that referred to the ongoing Nkandlagate scandal In February 2015 the SABC was accused of censoring video and audio feeds of the State of the Nation address in Parliament after opposition party EFF was forcefully ejected by armed plain clothes policemen after interrupting the President s speech Footage of opposition party DA walking out in protest over the presence of the armed personnel was also censored This was in addition to the presence of a signal jamming device that prevented journalists and MP s from being able to use their mobile devices to post news online 100 The SABC was criticised for banning footage that showed protests and demonstrations in the run up to the 2016 local elections 101 In July 2016 eight SABC journalists challenged the broadcaster s decision to censor news items and were dismissed from the organisation 102 103 A subsequent hearing at the Labour Court found the dismissals were unlawful and ordered the reinstatement of four of the full time SABC employees 104 During this period the eight journalists including Suna Venter were subjected to a number of death threats and other forms of intimidation 105 In October 2016 106 the South African parliament began investigating corruption allegations against SABC and its Group Executive of Corporate Affairs Hlaudi Motsoeneng 107 On 12 December the Western Cape High Court ruled that Motsoeneng be removed from office effective immediately 108 SABC Encore s launch party Edit At the channel s launch event the COO of SABC at the time used that event to rant about making pay TV platforms like MultiChoice s DStv pay for SABC 1 3 and how the SABC is run by a blind person He also took the stage to call out those with their lack of knowledge over the deal the public broadcaster has for the channel alongside SABC News 109 See also EditTelevision in South Africa List of South African television series List of children and youth programs produced by the SABC World Indigenous Television Broadcasters NetworkReferences Edit a b Cash strapped SABC reports R622m loss IOL Business Report www iol co za 4 September 2018 Retrieved 17 February 2019 a b SABC Corporate Board of Directors South African Broadcasting Corporation Archived from the original on 4 September 2009 Retrieved 16 February 2010 SABC Station List Archived from the original on 27 April 2006 SABC political bias will backfire Mail and Guardian 17 April 2014 Culture and Customs of South Africa Funso S Afọlayan Greenwood Publishing Group 2004 pages 114 115 a b Introduction to Public Relations and Advertising D F du Plessis Juta and Company Ltd 2000 page 89 a b South African media policy debates of the 1990s P Eric Louw Anthroppos 1993 page 99 Africa Institute Bulletin Volume 11 1973 page 155 Charles Segal Music Discography charlessegal com Retrieved 18 May 2018 Leaper Norm June July 1996 Ahh the Pitfalls of International Communication Communication World San Francisco CA International Association of Business Communicators 13 6 58 60 OCLC 107299423 Retrieved 14 March 2013 Louw Eric Mersham Gary 2001 Packing for Perth The Growth of a Southern African Diaspora PDF Asian and Pacific Migration Journal 10 2 303 33 doi 10 1177 011719680101000204 S2CID 153693948 Archived PDF from the original on 27 October 2011 Retrieved 14 March 2013 Ferreira Thinus 14 December 2020 DA starts petition against SABC TV licence plan for Netflix DStv News24 Retrieved 4 February 2021 SABC AND OPENVIEW SIGN a NEW CHANNEL CARRIAGE AGREEMENT SABC Official Website RSG celebrates 75 years Archived 23 February 2016 at the Wayback Machine SABC 29 March 2012 a b Broadcasting in South Africa Keyan G Tomaselli Currey 1989 page 197 Press Film Radio Volume 4 Unesco 1950 page 435 Scrutiny 2 Volumes 1 2 Department of English University of South Africa 1996 Debates of Parliament Hansard Volume 8 Issues 19 21 1988 page 12123 Springbok Radio Revisited SABC Report of the Task Group on Broadcasting in South and Southern Africa Task Group on Broadcasting in South and Southern Africa Christo Viljoen Government Printer 1991 page 2 South African Struggle J J McCord J H De Bussy 1952 page 432 Area Handbook for the Republic of South Africa Volume 550 Issue 93 Irving Kaplan U S Government Printing Office 1971 page 450 John R Shorten 1970 The Johannesburg Saga John R Shorten Pty Ltd p 729 Official South African Municipal Yearbook S A Association of Municipal Employees 1965 1966 Broadcasting Around the World William E McCavitt Tab Books 1981 page 21 South Africa Official Yearbook of the Republic of South Africa Department of Information 1989 page 596 South African Panorama Volume 32 South African Information Service 1987 page 39 South African Digest Department of Information 1978 page 17 Sounding the Cape Music Identity and Politics in South Africa Denis Constant Martin African Minds 2013 page 143 Catalog of Copyright Entries Musical compositions U S Government Printing Office 1957 page 582 The Star an extraordinary 20th century James Clarke The Star 1999 page 173 John Ono Lennon Volume 2 1967 1980 Muff Andersson Ravan Press 1981 page 281 South Africa Yearbook South African Communication Service 1995 page 292 Mojapelo Max 2008 Beyond Memory Recording the History Moments and Memories of South African Music African Minds pp 78 79 ISBN 978 1 920299 28 6 SABC www sabc co za Archived from the original on 13 May 2016 Retrieved 12 May 2016 Black Television Travels African American Media Around the Globe Timothy Havens NYU Press 2013 page 67 a b Boer War on the box Richard West The Spectator 9 April 1977 page 7 GLENN FRANKEL from The Washington Post 25 May 1986 Shows Allow Blacks Whites to Share Cultural Experiences South African Viewers Get a Mixed TV Message From U S Programs Los Angeles Times Retrieved 14 August 2012 Ban on sale of TV shows to South Africa lifted Anti apartheid blockade by actors union dropped following reform of broadcasting but opposition to touring remains The Independent 10 November 1993 The S A film industry African Studies Institute of the University of the Witwatersrand 1979 page 106 The voice the vision a sixty year history of the South African Broadcasting Corporation Malcolm Theunissen Victor Nikitin Melanie Pillay Advent Graphics 1996 page 120 South Africa Radio Denies Local Artists Are Snubbed Billboard 18 Dec 1982 page 55 The top 10 South African children s TV shows from days gone by The South African 29 November 2013 The Press and Apartheid Repression and Propaganda in South Africa William A Hachten C Anthony Giffard Springer 1984 page 222 Communication and Democratic Reform in South Africa Robert B Horwitz Cambridge University Press 2001 page 68 South Africa Official Yearbook of the Republic of South Africa Department of Information 1992 page 131 The voice the vision a sixty year history of the South African Broadcasting Corporation Malcolm Theunissen Victor Nikitin Melanie Pillay Advent Graphics 1996 page 127 The Voice of Apartheid Goes Multicultural Kimberly J McLarin The New York Times 25 July 1995 Africa e tv accuses SABC Business Day 27 November 1998 Language Policy and Nation Building in Post Apartheid South Africa Jon Orman Springer Science amp Business Media 2008 page 132 Information Digest The South Africa Foundation 1989 page 80 Surfing through the languages The Economist Volume 335 Issues 7917 7920 page 152 African Film and Television Magazine Volume 7 Z Productions 1995 South Africa ICASA Grants the Public Broadcaster Licences to Cater for Marginalized Languages AllAfrica 15 June 2005 SABC s ready to roll News24 14 March 2005 SABC adds channels Variety 19 June 2005 Hlaudi SABC will now start DTT with 5 TV channels News24 20 May 2015 SABC s 24 hour news channel raises many questions Business Day 26 July 2013 a b About the SABC gt Frequently Asked Questions Archived from the original on 27 October 2014 Retrieved 27 October 2014 Thinus Ferreira 25 April 2016 SABC wants to launch 5 new TV channels Channel24 Retrieved 25 September 2019 a b ADVERTISING permanent dead link The SABC downsizes its unfunded digital TV dream for DTT from 18 to these 9 TV channels TV With Thinus 26 September 2018 Thinus Ferreira 30 April 2020 The SABC launches SABC Education as a new tv channel will debut 4 May 2020 on YouTube and on DTT TV with Thinus Retrieved 1 May 2020 TV with Thinus Telkom launches its TelkomONE video streaming service including linear TV channels with free package and R7 per day subscription plans more bouquets and says we re here for the long run 9 November 2020 https www news24 com channel TV News sabc to launch its own video streaming service in 2021 20201022 2 amp h AT1MbhTUoBhbUCS6SWBpVtSbmjTpwTmvA GkBJ1zi5sa75Zn18Y pmPXhEcW2 2ZPAEy5DswBW8ID 8r Barwb 4gJixo57 l4Q3UCv4UdwScMv5k9wuzTiDmB 6DmsSfA amp s 1 bare URL SABC launches streaming app SABC Plus 17 November 2022 Media Law in Botswana Archived 18 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine Kluwer Law International 2011 page 22 Sentech s pirated Botswana signal finally off air ITWeb Africa 1 July 2013 The Laws of South West Africa J Meibert 1979 Sub Saharan Africa Report Issues 80 86 Foreign Broadcast Information Service 1985 page 40 SWA Namibia Today Section Liaison Services Department of Governmental Affairs 1988 page 98 Economic development strategies for independent Namibia Harbans Singh Wilfred W Asombang United Nations Institute for Namibia 1989 page 26 a b International TV amp Video Guide Richard Paterson Tantivy Press 1986 pages 181 183 Namibia Review Volume 11 Directorate of Production and Publicity Ministry of Information and Broadcasting 2002 page 16 TV CABO Archived 9 June 2002 at the Wayback Machine Perda dos canais 18 19 20 21 22 Archived 4 November 2003 at the Wayback Machine Perda dos canais 18 19 20 21 22 Archived 21 November 2003 at the Wayback Machine Perda dos canais 18 19 20 21 22 Archived 21 November 2003 at the Wayback Machine Media Studies Institutions theories and issues Pieter J Fourie Juta and Company Ltd 2001 page 54 Transnational Television Worldwide Towards a New Media Order Jean K Chalaby I B Tauris 2005 page 121 SABC Africa to go off air for now Mail and Guardian 14 July 2008 SABC International goes bust Mail and Guardian 5 February 2010 Ed Herbst ANC tightens its grip on the SABC BizCommunity com Archived from the original on 2 December 2013 Retrieved 23 November 2013 SABC phone tapping revelations MyBroadband Retrieved 13 April 2014 DA cries political censorship as SABC refuses to air second advert Times Live SABC bans EFF advert Sowetan Live SABC censored SONA broadcast mybroadband co za mybroadband Retrieved 15 February 2015 The SABC is a state owned company Communications Minister Times LIVE Sapa Retrieved 17 March 2015 Mail and Guardian article on Youth League Controversy Sunday Independent on Deputy President footage Sunday Times on Robert Mugabe Interview IOL News Report IFEX Self Censorship Warning IFOJ comment on Mbeki documentary John Perlman disclosed blacklist IOL on blacklisting allegations MG on blacklisting allegations Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 SABC chief takes control 5 October 2012 SABC censoring our adverts DA TimesLive Retrieved 13 April 2014 SONA What the ANC did not let the nation see The Media Online The Media Online Retrieved 15 February 2015 Mahr Krista 13 July 2016 South African public broadcaster accused of censorship Financial Times Archived from the original on 10 December 2022 Retrieved 3 January 2017 SABC 8 have all been fired News24 Retrieved 3 January 2017 News 24 Two more of the SABC8 journalists have been fired The M amp G Online Retrieved 3 January 2017 South Africa sacked reporters win SABC censorship case BBC News 26 July 2016 Retrieved 3 January 2017 HOFSTATTER STEPHAN 18 September 2016 Death threats spook SABC staffers Timesonline co za Archived from the original on 29 June 2017 Retrieved 1 July 2017 Parliament on inquiry into SABC board South African Government www gov za Retrieved 3 January 2017 Five things you should know about South Africa s scandal hit public broadcaster Newsweek 16 December 2016 Retrieved 3 January 2017 Brandt Kevin High Court rules Hlaudi Motsoeneng must be removed from position Retrieved 3 January 2017 TV with Thinus At bizarre SABC Encore channel launch event SABC s Hlaudi Motsoeneng rants and raves saying MultiChoice must pay SABC is coming for pay TV 12 May 2015 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to South African Broadcasting Corporation Official website IOL SABC gags Mbeki unauthorised documentary Report of SABC Commission on Blacklisting Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title SABC amp oldid 1134589704, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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