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TVIEC invites media to guerilla protest action
The Television Industry Emergency Coalition (TVIEC) this morning, Tuesday, 25 August 2009, issued an invitation to media todocument the guerrilla action planned for Thursday 27 August afternoon at the SABC Radio Park, Auckland Park, Johannesburg, in protest against SABC's intentions to axe planned expenditure on local content amounting to R500 million.
In a bid to turn itself around, the SABC believes its only option is to fill South African screens with a massive schedule of repeat programming, which it has been forced to begin. In light of this, the TVIEC is continuing with protest action in a bid to save SA stories and the industry.
According to the press statement:
This week writers and actors will take the lead in a visually powerful guerrilla action to send a stark and shocking message to the SABC that the industry is becoming increasingly angry and increasingly desperate as thousands of skilled labourers are without work in an industry that is crucial to job creation and to the dissemination of our national culture, debate and identity.We are inviting the media to come and document the action and to engage with a select group of picketers who will be telling their stories. Some core players will be present for interviews. Also present will be Michael Lee - who has embarked on a hunger strike in protest at SABC's slashing of local content. (Lee has entered his 16th day and now other activists within the industry are planning to join him.)
When and Where
Thursday 27 August from 1pm to 1.30pm outside Radio Park
We want to send a message that a country without a platform for its stories will lose its culture, it's [sic] power to educate and its power to entertain. It is the job of the public broadcaster to promote our culture and our stories. We need a responsible SABC that will put together a muscular business plan and streamline its management. We believe that an attempt to turn the SABC around by cutting their key product - programming - will cause irreparable damage to the independent production sector and to the SABC's credibility.