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Appeal Decision: Dr. Nishana Inderjeen


Sat, Apr 11, 2015

DR NISHANA INDERJEEN                                                                APPLICANT

versus

POST                                                                                                      RESPONDENT

MATTER NO:

__________________________________________________________________

DECISION: APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL

[1]     In its edition for the 10 – 14 December 2014, Post (“Respondent”), published the photo of a 3 year old child.  It was a horrific photo, showing the child as malnourished.  Dr Nishana Inderjeeth (“applicant”) was horrified by the photo.  She lodged a complaint with the Office of the Ombudsman.  In his Ruling of 16 January 2015, the Ombudsman dismissed the complaint.

[2]     The applicant complained that the authenticity of the photo, which was published after the child had died, and uploaded from the internet, was not verified; she also wondered whether the permission of the child’s father had been obtained.  She felt that the picture was being exploited for commercial gain; newspapers were not a gossip column.  Respondent’s reply was that the picture was published in the public interest; the child died a horrific death and respondent was “committed to exposing the pain and suffering (the child) suffered.”  Respondent also says the identity of the child was verified by three independent sources, including a local ward councillor.

[3]     I believe the picture was published in the public’s interest.  I take into account also the fact that the respondent says the picture was published in the period when violence against children and women was being highlighted. Subsequent medial evidence showed that the child had been abused; her mother and grandmother were charged with her murder.  I appreciate applicant’s argument that the applicant should have waited until the criminal case had run its cause; but I don’t think the publication of the picture would have impacted on the proceedings.

[4]     In her application for leave to appeal, applicant repeats the issue of the authenticity of the picture.  Again, she argues that the article was fraught with assumptions, apparently referring to the photo.  She also raises new issues which had not been dealt with by the Ombudsman and which cannot of course be raised now.  She concedes though that the matter was of public interest but that the publication of the photo was still not justified.

[5]     I do not find any fault in the manner in which the Ombudsman dealt with the matter.  For the reasons I state above, as well as those by the Ombudsman, I am of the view that the applicant has no reasonable prospects of success before the Appeals Panel; the application is therefore dismissed.

Dated 11 April 2015

Judge B M Ngoepe, Chair, Appeals Panel