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Mission
The mission of MISA is to play a leading role in creating an environment
of media freedom and free expression that promotes independence,
pluralism and diversity
of views and opinions, media sustainability, competency and professionalism
in the southern African region. In
dealing with these elements,
MISA will ensure that gender-specific needs form an integral part of
all its activities.
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MISA
aims to create an environment in which civil society
is empowered to claim information and access to it as unalienable rights
and in which the resultant freer information flow strengthens democracy
by enabling more informed citizen participation.
The objective of MISA is to lobby for promotion and protection of media
freedom and free expression. It is also to strengthen and support the
development of a vibrant, professional and participatory media sector
as an essential
part of the deepening of democracy in southern Africa.
Vision
MISA's vision is of a southern Africa region in which the media enjoys
freedom of expression, independence from political, economic and commercial
interests, pluralism of views and opinions. Our vision is of a region
where members of society, individually or collectively are free to express
themselves
through any media of their choice without hindrance of any kind. A region,
too, where access to information must be unhindered and where information
is readily available.
The MISA vision is:
• A media that is free, independent, diverse and pluralistic.
• Access to the media and information by all sectors of society.
• Media workers who are competent, critical, accountable, sensitive to
gender issues and aware of their responsibility to society.
• Legislation, regulations and policy environments that support media independence,
diversity and pluralism.
• Citizens in the SADC region that are empowered to claim information as
a basic right.
Principles and Values
The mission and vision of MISA are based on the following principles
and values:
• Freedom of expression as defined in article 19 of the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights and article 9 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples'
Rights;
• Media freedom, independence, diversity and pluralism as provided for
in the Windhoek Declaration of 1991;
• Three tier separation of power as provided for in the SADC ICT Declaration
of 2001 with the government being responsible for a conducive national
policy framework, independent regulator responsible for licensing and
a multiplicity of providers in a competitive environment responsible for
providing services;
• Three tier system of broadcasting (public, commercial and community)
as provided in the African Charter on Broadcasting of 2001;
• Media professionalism and the observance of ethical standards in media
products that seek to inform, empower, educate and entertain;
• Citizens' right to access to information in order to enhance transparency
and citizen participation in government, judiciary and legislative issues.
• Participatory democracy, respect for human rights, equality, human dignity,
freedom and non-discrimination; and
• Gender equality in and through the media and society.
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