Bureaucrats love to
show their power by taking their time. The longer they take, the more their
hapless subjects have to grovel to get their case attended to. Nowhere is this
tactic more effective than in the Congo, where there is, in effect, no
likelihood of getting redress unless it is by paying huge sums of money.
One of the recent
cases of such delay has been in lifting a ban on an airline which had a crash.
The whole fleet was instantly grounded, and before long it looked as though the
matter would drag on until the final results of the enquiry were released many
months, if not years, later. So far, there’s not been a tweet.
Another case hit the
headlines recently. The Supreme Council for Audiovisual and Communication
Affairs, which is responsible for regulating the media, had stopped taking any
decisions. This has been going on for a very long time, and the 400 recognised
radio stations were up in arms about the delays. It seems that the cause, in this case, was
less a matter of deliberate delaying tactics than a complete breakdown of the
system, so something had to be done.
But instead of taking the traditional route of
confrontation, for example by demanding action in radio and television
interviews, and getting massive press coverage of the misuse of power by the
Council, or even public demonstrations, they (the radio and TV stations affected) published this advertisement which
I find delightfully quaint:
We, the Federation of
Radios Stations in the Congo (FRSC), with 400 members operating in all 11
provinces of the DRC, met on Thursday 22 March 2012 in an extraordinary
session;
Note the current
crisis at the Supreme Council for Audiovisual and Communication Affairs (SCACA)
regarding its image;
Knowing that SCACA was
created as a citizen’s institution in support of democracy;
Considering that the
president of this institution is our guide;
Confident in the
capacity of the members of SCACA to deal with this internal crisis;
Concerned with the
professional well-being of the media in the DRC, with peace and national
concord;
Seeing the urgency and
necessity
Declare as follows:
1.
Members of
SCACA must recall that they have a onerous task to regulate the media
throughout the country, and the future of the media depend largely on their
work within the institution;
2.
The FRSC
asks the esteemed councillors of the SCACA and members of its administration to
show great wisdom and great maturity in preserving peace between each other and
national unity, and as a support for sustainable development in our country;
3.
The FRSC
reiterates its total support and all its confidence in the president of the
SCACA in the person of Mr, the Abbott Jean Bosco Bahala;
4.
The
Federation recalls that the media constitute the forum, par excellence, for
popular expression, and that they are unchallengeable within the Congolese
state as a medium of communication;
5.
The FRSC
invites the esteemed councillors and members of the administration to sit
around the same table, placing, above all else, the needs of the population in
doing their jobs and undertaking the mission entrusted to them so that the
problems can be solved internally, and avoid external interference.
6.
The FRSC
invites the President of SCACA, as a good father of the family, to expedite
dialogue to reinforce collaboration and harmony within the Council for the
welfare of the profession and the whole nation;
7.
Finally
the FRSC appreciates how the situation has evolved while calling on the wisdom
of everyone in preserving democratic values.
Did it work? We’ll have
to wait and see.
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