Writer Eric Miyeni has called for Avusa to fire its editor-in-chief, after the Sowetan‘s acting editor stepped down over the column that got Miyeni sacked, citing double standards.
“If Avusa is dismissing Len Maseko … it should also dismiss Mondli Makhanya, the boss,” he said.
The Sowetan‘s acting editor fell on his sword on Wednesday after the publication of a controversial column by Miyeni about about City Press editor Ferial Haffajee entitled “Haffajee does it for white masters”.
Len Maseko took up the reins at the newspaper in a temporary capacity earlier this year, taking over in turn from Thabo Leshilo. Mpumelelo Mkhabela, previously the editor of Daily Dispatch, will now helm the newspaper. Avusa’s parliamentary head Brendan Boyle will take over at the East London newspaper, Avusa said in a statement on Wednesday, bizcommunity.com reported.
Maseko was on leave at the time Miyeni’s controversial column was published, but according to the statement, “he accepts the consequences of this lapse in the paper’s judgment, which allowed the column to appear”, the website said.
But Miyeni accused Avusa of double standards, saying that Maseko was dismissed.
“Mondli Makhanya should have been fired for publishing the controversial column that got David Bullard fired from the Sunday Times,” said Miyeni.
Bullard was sacked after an outcry over a column about an uncolonised Africa, which was perceived as racist.
Miyeni was axed from the Sowetan’s line-up of columnists this week over his column about Haffajee, which was published on Monday.
“There is no legal proof of any wrongdoing with regards to my Sowetan column, he said.
“For that reason, nobody, including me, should have been fired by Avusa for it,” he said.
Instead of being fired after the Bullard matter, Makhanya was promoted to editor-in-chief, said Miyeni.
“He is the one who taught Avusa editors, by example, that you do not have to do your editorial duties to get ahead at Avusa.
“You must simply apologise when things go wrong after the fact and fire an underling. Mondli should be fired too,” he said
Makhanya could not immediately be reached for comment.
On Wednesday, Haffajee said she was seeking advice on what to do about Miyeni’s description of her as a “black snake” who might have been necklaced during the apartheid era.
Necklacing involves pushing a rubber tyre soaked in petrol over a person’s head and shoulders and setting it alight, leading to a slow death by burning.
It was commonly associated with the murder of black people accused of collaborating with apartheid-era security forces, but is still recorded in South Africa in acts of vigilantism.
Haffajee did not know yet whether she should go to court over the matter, or to the press ombudsman, but said she felt she “must do something about this”.
She said Miyeni was a writer and “thought leader” she had admired, having read all his books, which include The Only Black at the Dinner Party.
However, Monday’s column was hate speech, she said.
Miyeni wrote it in response to the City Press‘s reportage on a trust ANC Youth League president Julius Malema registered in the name of his son.
It was reported that an unnamed businessman had claimed the trust was used to funnel funds to Malema in exchange for being given preference when contracts and tenders were awarded.
The newspaper has previously run articles which have raised questions about how Malema afforded his lifestyle, which reportedly includes a multi-million rand home in Sandton and loans of luxury vehicles.
Malema said the trust was used to pass donations to charity, and felt his other financial affairs were private and not up for scrutiny by anyone other than the tax man.
He encouraged anyone with information on a bribe paid to him to approach the police for an investigation.
The police have already been asked to investigate Malema’s lifestyle, by the Freedom Front Plus.
In the column, Miyeni wanted to know why City Press was investigating only blacks and not whites.
Miyeni is considering suing the Sowetan for his sacking.
He asked why the Sowetan reacted only on Monday, after it was published, when he had submitted the column on the previous Thursday.
“I ask myself why the article was published in the first place,” reader Lindy Nene, of Alberton, wrote in a letter to the editor published in the Sowetan on Wednesday.
“I think it’s one of two things: The editor thought the article fit for public consumption and published, or the editor simply has no idea what is happening in his own backyard, meaning he is not doing his job.”
Apart from Bullard, Kuli Roberts of the Sunday World and Deon Maas of Rapport have had their columns canned in recent years as a result of a public outcry over their work.
Roberts wrote on stereotypes of coloured women, and Maas on Satanism. — Sapa