/ 3 June 2013

Tambo defends ‘People of the South’ interview with Mugabe

Dali Tambo defended his interview with Robert Mugabe on SABC3. Gallo Images
Dali Tambo defended his interview with Robert Mugabe on SABC3. Gallo Images

Responding to the criticism by CapeTalk567 radio presenter Kieno Kammies, the People of the South presenter shouted on Monday: "What do you mean a PR exercise? What you wanted me to do was to say to him, 'you're lying, Robert Mugabe you're a liar. That's not true, how dare you say that? You're a bloody liar'."

This was in response to CapeTalk567's Kammies saying he had been disappointed by the interview broadcast on SABC3 on Sunday night.

"Is that what you think an interview is?" Tambo continued.

Kammies said his opinion was in the light of events in Zimbabwe in the past 10 to 12 years, which included "land grabs", human rights' violations and political violations.

Mugabe the man
In an audio clip of the interview posted on Kammies's Twitter profile, Tambo says: "Listen, the first thing to understand about People of the South: we are not Hard Talk [a BBC interview show].

"I get weary of saying this. If you've watched any of the shows you will know that we are 'people' of the south, not 'politics' of the south. We deal in people. And whether that person is an artist or a politician, I deal partly with what they do in their work, and partly with who they are, okay."

That format did not change for Mugabe.

"If you start the interview hating him, and you go in there with a closed mind, that's your problem. I present the man as he actually is, and you must take what you want from it. Those are his answers to my questions. I covered pretty much every part of [the] guy's life, the bad and the good."

Tambo, the son of anti-apartheid leaders Oliver and Adelaide Tambo, said that before his interview: "You had never heard a word the guy said in consecutive conversation before."

In the rare interview with Zimbabwe's first family, Mugabe reveals what attracted him to his wife Grace as well as domestic concerns such as worrying about his children doing their homework. However, he also accuses Nelson Mandela of being too soft on whites

Human rights 
When Kammies asked why he had not asked a question about recent human rights reports, Tambo said: "Why would I, when I have got 48 minutes to do the life of an 89-year-old man, raise the human rights report that you are talking about?

"Why is that central to 89 years of a man's life? A recent human rights report? There have been many human rights reports … How many human rights reports do you think there are on Great Britain, on the US, on all kinds of great countries?"

He had his own interview style, he continued.

"If you want to go and interview Robert Mugabe about the human rights report, that's your prerogative. I covered a lot of things. Don't obsess on what you want me to obsess on, because it's my interview, you understand."

Heavy editing
He had to reduce over two hours of footage to 48 minutes for the show. It has previously featured Democratic Alliance leader Helen Zille and Public Protector Thuli Madonsela.

"Please understand, I am not a politician. I am not there to do the trial of Robert Mugabe, as much as you would like me to do."

He said he had received compliments after the show, even from people who "despised" Mugabe.

The interview ended with Kammies saying he could not continue with Tambo shouting over him. – Sapa