/ 1 March 2007

Pahad fumes at BBC crime documentary

The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) has been slammed by Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister Aziz Pahad after the broadcaster aired a documentary on crime in South Africa, Business Day reported on its website on Thursday.

The documentary was broadcast at the time of President Thabo Mbeki’s State of the Nation address. It was filmed in Hillbrow and concluded that Johannesburg was the crime capital of the world.

African National Congress (ANC) MP Mike Masutha got the debate rolling this week with a member’s statement in the National Assembly that said crime statistics showed there had been considerable improvements in the situation in Hillbrow. He condemned the BBC’s programme.

Pahad said the BBC report was ”selective, one-sided and distorted”. He said he could not understand how it could have come from an institution with such a good reputation for fair reporting.

He said the government had acknowledged that crime was at unacceptably high in SA and had consistently made more resources available in the fight against crime.

He added that the high crime rate was not unique to SA.

”There are also places in London where you cannot go,” he said.

Last week, the ANC, on its website, accused the BBC of being racist and said the SABC could easily go to Britain and do a similar exposé in parts of London suggesting that Britain was also sinking under a wave of crime. – Sapa