(From Swazi Media Commentary 2 October 2009 www.swazimedia.blogspot.com)
 
Readers following the saga of the despicably callous way the Times of Swaziland 
group of newspapers has treated the Swazi lesbian couple who declared they were 
to marry one another will not be surprised to learn that one of them has 
reportedly attempted suicide.

In August the Times Sunday invaded the couple’s privacy by secretly attending a 
restaurant party at which the two women declared their love for each other and 
their marriage intentions to friends. The newspaper then gave readers lurid 
details of what the two women might get up to in bed together.

Not content with that invasion of the couple’s privacy and human rights the 
newspaper group later gave space to people to attack the couple. So-called 
‘Christians’ went to town about how sinful homosexuals are.

The Times of Swaziland, invaded the couple’s privacy when it allowed 
Swaziland’s ‘acting traditional prime minister’ Timothy Velabo Mtsetfwa, to 
threaten the couple that ‘traditional authorities’ would not allow the marriage 
to go ahead.

It also reported on family members of the couple criticising their choice to 
marry.

Not content withal this the Times then encouraged the truly anti-Christian body 
the Swaziland Conference of Churches (SCC) to gang up against the lesbian 
couple.

And now comes news that the newspaper may have hounded one of the lesbians to 
try to take her own life as today the Times reports today (2 October 2009) that 
one of the couple has attempted suicide.

I won’t go into detail of the report except to say that the newspaper felt it 
had the right (i) to publish speculation that the woman had actually attempted 
suicide, (ii) speculate why she did it and (iii) inform the woman’s partner of 
the suicide attempt and then to publish the poor woman’s response to the news.

Many, many times in the past I have written about how journalists in Swaziland 
disregard their own Swaziland National Association of Journalists code of 
conduct. Among other things it covers discrimination against minority groups 
and how to deal sensitively with sexual matters and how not to intrude on 
privacy.

The Times has failed to abide by so many clauses of the code that it shows to 
me that the editors and journalists at the newspaper group have no idea what 
journalism is about.

By a coincidence of timing, the Swaziland Government is trying once again to 
muzzle the media with a new Media Commission Act to regulate the media. The 
government says it doesn’t trust the newspapers to regulate themselves.

Although the real purpose of the Act is to control the media so that they only 
report what government wants, it is hard to argue that newspapers such as the 
Times can be trusted to regulate themselves.

The Times has done the cause of freedom in Swaziland a great disservice in its 
reporting. If the Swazi government goes ahead with the Act, democrats would 
have to fight it on principle. We should defend freedom of the press 
everywhere. But that is not the same as defending the Times.

The Times on its present form doesn’t deserve our defence. If it closed down 
tomorrow we would lose nothing. In fact it might be a blessing, because then 
there would be a gap in the media landscape for another newspaper to move in 
and take its place. 
 
Link http://swazimedia.blogspot.com/2009/10/times-and-lesbian-suicide-bid.html


      
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