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SABC fined R10k after Isidingo uses woman’s real phone number

Cape Town – The SABC has been fined R10 000 after its SABC3 weekday TV soap Isidingo used a woman’s real telephone number.

The cell phone number was used in a late November 2016 episode of Isidingo. 

Thapelo Diale was instantly flooded by a barrage of calls and messages. It got so bad that she was disciplined through a warning letter in December 2016, negatively impacting her HR record at the railway company she works for.

The SABC offered up an apology but Diale, who had lodged a complaint with the Broadcasting Complaints Commission of South Africa (BCCSA), said that wasn’t enough for the personal chaos Isidingo caused and that she had to endure as a result of the South African public broadcaster’s negligence.

She told the BCCSA of the emotional harm and verbal abuse she suffered when answering her phone.

The SABC told the BCCSA that actor Shona Ferguson, who plays Thapelo “Tyson” Mokoena in Isidingo produced by Endemol Shine Africa, was told by the director in a scene shot in October 2016, to write down a cell phone number for another character as per the script.

The SABC revealed that script for the Isidingo episode “did not have a cell number for the character to use at the time when the scene was being shot”.

‘Unprecedented, serious negative consequences’

In its judgment the BCCSA found that the SABC invaded the privacy of the complainant, and that the shocking mistake “had unprecedented, extraordinary and serious negative consequences”. 

The BCCSA said “it constituted a breach of her privacy and disrupted her work and that of her colleagues”.

The BCCSA slammed the SABC as “grossly negligent to randomly choose a cell phone number for use in a popular soap opera”. 

The BCCSA said “many viewers form personal relationships with actors and therefore may continue to call the number. The scriptwriters and producers should have foreseen that the number could be a real and private number belonging to somebody”.

Invited to the Isidingo set

After the decision to do an on-air apology, Diale appealed the judgment, saying she didn’t believe that the judgment is proportional to the offence.

She told the BCCSA that “I feel that Isidingo seems to be getting away with just a slap on the wrist whereas we don't even know if the apology will actually stop the consequence of their negligence; not forgetting the irreparable dent to my employment record by way of a warning letter.”

“It needs to hit them in the pocket so as to appreciate the magnitude of the inconvenience caused.”

The SABC’s broadcasting compliance department argued for an apology to suffice, told the BCCSA’s said that “given the time that has since elapsed since the incident took place, broadcasting an apology shows that the SABC is a caring and responsive broadcaster”.

The SABC said “this unfortunate incident has taught us critical lessons about handling matters about invasion of privacy”.

Later on during the hearing, the SABC offered to broadcast an apology and invite Diale to the Isidingo set to meet the actors as well as Shona Ferguson who gave out her cell phone number on the air.

In the end Diale and the SABC agreed that the SABC shouldn’t broadcast an apology, with Diale fearing that it might encourage even more callers to start calling her number again.

She also asked that the SABC’s lawyers must urgently write her employer to explain what happened and to ask for the warning letter that she got to be rescinded, and that the SABC must ensure that her cell phone number is removed from all Isidingo footage and the soap’s YouTube uploads.

“The SABC failed to demonstrate that it took exceptional care and consideration before calling out a mobile number live on TV, without first checking out if it belongs to anyone,” the BCCSA found.

“This act, in our view is tantamount to gross negligence on the part of the broadcaster.”

The BCCSA fined the SABC R10k that must be paid before 20 April.

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