Who makes the judgement call about what resources to deploy in a police investigation, and then whether to pursue a prosecution?
Because whoever did so in the case of the Sunday Times leadership, who are now apparently facing prosecution, seems to have been motivated by reasons that go beyond sheer law enforcement. And sheer logic.
If you really must charge an offending journalist (whose publishing a judge had already found was in the public interest), then allocate a routine cop to prepare the case of why a law was allegedly violated along the way. Instead, in this case, we see a top dog taken away from other duties to investigate the “sins” of a newspaper – and he even gets sent to New Zealand nogal.
And, having got the evidence, isn’t it still the easiest thing in the world to decide to drop charges on the basis that a case isn’t worth the candle? Where’s the proportion here? It’s hardly a situation of South African journalists stealing records left, right and centre, defrauding the public for private purposes in so doing, and so forth.
The intention in this pursuing of the Sunday Times, it appears, is twofold:
Far from succeeding, this is a poor political calculation on all counts. It’s backfired in three ways:
Further, the state’s action has added additional damaging issues to the original agenda: the image of a vindictive bully-boy government abusing state institutions for political purposes, on the one hand, and the Sunday Times as martyr on the other.
So who drives these decisions? They’re doing a disservice to everyone — including themselves. I think we need the records of who they are.
(Not that all the media are very savvy (or saintly) — see how some screwed up the reporting on the fiasco.)