South African Anglican Archbishop opposes Secrecy Bill – An Open Letter to President Zuma

Posted by Kendall Harmon

Dear Mr President,

I write to you as one who grew up under a system that oppressed and censored the media – a system that invoked fear in anyone who dared to read, or embrace, different views to those of the government of the day. The passage of the Protection of State Information Bill has stirred up in me vivid memories of my time as a student in the 1980s at Wits, and the traumatising experience of police ransacking our residence as they looked for classified material. The undercurrent of fear running through our lives that this created is so totally in contradiction to the open atmosphere of constructively critical readings of our life and times which we so much need in South Africa today.

Of course, every country has state secrets, and needs to classify them as such and protect them. I fully understand this. That South Africa needs to replace the old law from apartheid times, I also fully agree. Yet I also hear the cry that the current bill passed this week lacks the one necessary thing, an adequate public interest clause that relates to the criminality of those who ‘transgress’ on these grounds.

Read it all.

Filed under: * Anglican - EpiscopalAnglican ProvincesChurch of South Africa* Culture-WatchLaw & Legal IssuesReligion & Culture* International News & CommentaryAfricaSouth Africa

1 Comments
Posted November 27, 2011 at 2:02 pm [Printer Friendly] [Print w/ comments]



1. yohanelejos wrote:

The Archbishop is dead right in what he’s saying here. The new law strikes me as quite dangerous.

November 28, 4:48 am | [comment link]
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