Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Max du Preez

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Max Preez


Role
  
Author

Max du Preez httpspbstwimgcomprofileimages2765989923cc

Books
  
A Rumour of Spring: South Afri, Pale native, Of Warriors - Lovers an, Of Tricksters - Tyrants a, The Rough Guide to Nelson M

Max du preez post apartheid skepticism


Max du Preez (born 3 March 1951) is a South African author, columnist and documentary filmmaker and was the founding editor of Vrye Weekblad.

Contents

Max du Preez cdn24cozafilesCmsGenerald2031df8727b39c1f

Three questions for max du preez


Beeld

Max du Preez is a writer, columnist and documentary filmmaker. He founded the Vrye Weekblad, an Afrikaans-language weekly and the first anti-apartheid newspaper. He won the Nat Nakasa Award for fearless reporting in 2008. Between 1982-1988, Du Preez was the Political Correspondent for various publications including Beeld, Financial Mail, Sunday Times and Business Day. He currently works independently.

Vrye Weekblad

Du Preez founded the Vrye Weekblad, an Afrikaans-language weekly newspaper, in November 1988. During his tenure as editor-in-chief, the newspaper's offices were bombed and Du Preez received death threats as a result of the paper's opposition to apartheid.

He was sentenced to six months in jail for quoting Joe Slovo, the then leader of the South African Communist Party and a banned person.

The Vrye Weekblad broke the news of the Vlakplaas Death Squads and the role of its commander, Dirk Coetzee.

Dismissal from the SABC

In 1999, Du Preez was dismissed by the SABC from his position as the executive editor of Special Assignment, an investigative television show, after he objected when a documentary was barred from being shown. Though initially it was simply stated that his contract would not be renewed, the SABC later said he had been dismissed for gross insubordination.

The decision led to a public campaign to call for his reinstatement and the handling by the SABC led to complaints to the Broadcasting Complaints Commission of South Africa. The incident was seen as symptomatic of a public broadcaster voluntarily transforming itself into a state propaganda apparatus.

"Womaniser" remark

Rumours that then-President Thabo Mbeki was a philanderer were controversially brought to light by a comment Du Preez made on a national radio show in 2001. During a discussion on the lack of examination of the private life of Mbeki, Du Preez said: "He is seen as a womaniser. It is publicly known and I think we should start talking about this, that the president has this kind of personal life. I'm not saying it's scandalous. He's a womaniser."

The remark was subsequently carried on the front page of the The Citizen, leading to multiple complaints, apologies and a statement by a provincial branch of the African National Congress that it accepted "declaration of war by Max du Preez and his political masters who have unleashed an unprecedented vitriol against the ANC, its leadership, the President and its supporters."

Awards

  • 1991 - Louis M. Lyons Award for conscience and integrity in journalism
  • 1996 - Excellence in Journalism award from the Foreign Correspondents' Association of Southern Africa
  • 2006 - Yale Globalist International Journalist of the Year
  • 2008 - Nat Nakasa Award for fearless reporting
  • References

    Max du Preez Wikipedia


    Similar Topics