Editor's Note: Our National Press Freedom Day commitment to readers

Published Oct 19, 2020

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On Wednesday October 19, 1977, a year and four months after the Soweto uprising and two months after the arrest of Steve Biko, the apartheid government swooped.

It banned Black Consciousness organisations and newspapers critical of its regime, including The World, the largest circulation black newspaper; detained its editor Percy Qoboza among other activists, journalists and critics of its policies and brutality.

This day is commemorated today as “Black Wednesday” or National Press Freedom Day and serves as a reminder of the role of an independent media in our democracy, and how we got to be where we are today with a Constitution that protects the right to freedom of expression, including freedom of the press and other media.

The media in South Africa in 2020 operates in an entirely different political, economic and technological environment to that of the 1970s and 1980s, but this does not mean the importance of journalism has changed.

We must continue to serve society through the reporting of news in our communities, by holding those who are in power to account, and by contributing to an open and transformed society.

At Independent Media this is what we aim to do and the Cape Argus is proud to be part of a group that pursues this agenda without fear or favour and despite the barrage of attacks on its owner, its editors and its journalists.

On this National Press Freedom Day we recommit to readers of all our titles and digital platforms that in this critical time of inequality and wrongdoing, we will hold ourselves to high standards of accurate, fair and balanced reporting.

Like the leading black journalists under apartheid in whose fearless footsteps we follow, we will not be intimidated or oppressed by vested interest groups and bullies out there who seek to silence us.

* Aziz Hartley is the editor of the Cape Argus newspaper.

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