Category Archives: Journalism

Media in Africa: twenty years after the Windhoek Declaration on press freedom

From: Yona Maro

The publication begins with an overview of the past two decades and shares assessments on the status of press freedom in Africa. The contributions are organised under four key sections – Freedom, Pluralism, Independence, and Access to Information. Articles cover these issues, as well as journalists’ safety, gender sensitive reporting, and the role of the internet.

http://www.misa.org/researchandpublication/democracy/MIA.pdf


Karibu Jukwaa la www.mwanabidii.com
Pata nafasi mpya za Kazi www.kazibongo.blogspot.com
Blogu ya Habari na Picha www.patahabari.blogspot.com

SOMALIA: KILLING OF JOURNALIST CONDEMNED

Sent by Agwanda Saye

Young journalist murdered in Mogadishu
Posted by: africanpressorganization | 17 September 2012

MOGADISHU, Somalia, September 17, 2012/African Press Organization (APO)/ – The National Union of Somali Journalists (NUSOJ) today condemned sustained deadly violence against journalists following the killing of young journalist in Mogadishu.
[ . . . ]

http://appablog.wordpress.com/2012/09/17/young-journalist-murdered-in-mogadishu/

What Role Should the Media Play in Determining the Content of Campaign Advertisements?

From: Yona Maro

That the media is an essential tool in any functioning democracy is not in doubt. What are the motives behind the various contents contained in the media? This question of motives becomes more pronounced during the electioneering period as is the case in Kenya.

Has the media in Kenya considered analyzing the content of campaign adverts to gauge their motives apart from selling the politicians’ and political parties’ manifestos? Could the content of these campaign adverts generate some sort of indicators that could be used to sound alarm bells on whether they are promoting peace and harmonious coexistence or fuelling violence? This is critical given that adverts enable individuals and groups to say what they want to say the way they would want their audiences to receive the information.

Indeed, it is no secret that persons with political ambitions set up media outlets. They depend on them for constant positive coverage and visibility. There is a direct link between the quest for political office and the quantity of media clout, presence or manipulation that a candidate commands. While this might be the case, the nation comes first and the content that is printed and/or broadcast should promote peace and harmony.
http://www.comminit.com/policy-blogs/content/what-role-should-media-play-determining-content-campaign-advertisements


Karibu Jukwaa la www.mwanabidii.com
Pata nafasi mpya za Kazi www.kazibongo.blogspot.com
Blogu ya Habari na Picha www.patahabari.blogspot.com

Two arrested for covering Malawi, Tanzania oil talks

Forwarded by From: Charles Banda

– – – – – – – – – –

Journos arrested for covering Malawi, Tanzania oil talks

By Nyasa Times Reporter August 23, 2012

Police on Thursday arrested two freelance journalists who went to cover the ongoing diplomatic border talks between Malawi and Tanzania at the Mzuzu Hotel accusing them of publishing false news.

The dispute stems from colonial-era border lines around Lake Malawi, Africa’s third-largest.
The main task of this meeting of experts is for the two sides to exchange documents and hopefully reach a consensus that will end the age old border row.
[ . . . ]
http://www.nyasatimes.com/malawi/2012/08/23/journos-arrested-for-covering-malawi-tanzania-oil-talks/

The Gambia shuts independent radio station

Forwarded by : Chak Rachar

New York, August 15, 2012–Gambian national security agents summarily shut an independent radio station early this morning without providing an explanation, according to news reports. Authorities have censored Taranga FM at least twice before in retaliation for its exclusive news review program, according to news reports.

Officers of the Gambian National Intelligence Agency stormed Taranga FM studios in Sinchu Alhagie village, southwest of Banjul, the capital, and forced it off the air, according to news reports. The officials also took the station’s license as well as the contact information of its board members, local journalists said. The officers told the station staff only that they had received “directives from above,” news reports said.
[ . . . ]

http://www.cpj.org/2012/08/the-gambia-shuts-independent-radio-station.php

Freelance reporter becomes eighth journalist to be killed in Somalia this year

Forwarded by Chak Rachar

– – – – – – – – – –

A Somali journalist who had recently decided to return to his home country was shot dead in Mogadishu earlier this week, becoming the eighth journalist to be killed in the conflict-torn nation this year.

Mohamud Ali Keyre, also known as ‘Buneyste’ was reportedly shot in the head, with witnesses and other journalists suggesting that the bullet was shot by a government soldier.

The 23-year-old freelance journalist worked for Horyaalmedia.com news website, and used to work for the Voice of Democracy radio station before fleeing to Kenya after he received death threats.
[ . . . ]
http://www.dc4mf.org/en/content/freelance-reporter-becomes-eighth-journalist-be-killed-somalia-year

KENYA RELIGIOUS LEADERS ARE PUBLIC FIGURES AND SHOULD TOLERATE A HIGH LEVEL OF CRITICISM

By Article 19

ARTICLE 19 is increasingly concerned about threats and attacks against journalists in Kenya who report on matters of public interest involving religious leaders.

On 29 June 2012, Erasto Agwanda Saye, a journalist based in Kisumu, was physically attacked after writing an article alleging that an ‘Overseer’ (or pastor) in A Kisumu based church situated along Kisumu Nairobi road was engaged in adultery.

Saye reported that church-goers were criticizing the appointment of the new Overseer, who they claimed was a serial ‘wife-inheritor’ and adulterer. When Saye asked for comment from the Bishop who made the appointment, he was warned of ‘dire consequences’ should he report the story. In a text message to Saye the Bishop wrote ‘Try and write the story, you will know who I am.’ Saye’s attackers have been arrested and charged with beating the journalist.

On 22 July 2012 two Nation TV journalists were threatened after attending a church service before ‘Fire Ministries Church’ Pastor, Michael Njoroge. The journalists were pursuing a story that Njoroge had paid prostitutes to falsely claim that they had been healed after receiving prayers from him. Njoroge warned the journalists that they would ‘eat grass’ (meaning they would be cursed and equated to an animal) and suggested that he could invoke the power of God to transfer illness to those who challenged him. The threats were later broadcasted on Nation TV.

ARTICLE 19 is concerned both by the threatened and actual violence against journalists in these cases, as well as the underlying reasoning that religious leaders should not be offended nor criticised in the media.

The right to freedom of expression protects not only the expression of information and ideas that are favourably received but also those that offend, shock or disturb the State or any sector of the population. Freedom of expression can indeed be restricted if it is necessary to do so to protect the rights of others. However, public figures are legitimately subjected to criticism and should, given their position, role and influence, tolerate increased public scrutiny. Religious leaders are public figures as they play a role in public life. Therefore ARTICLE 19 affirms that certain aspects of their private lives may be of legitimate public interest and justify journalistic enquiry. The issue of alleged corruption in the functioning of churches in Kenya is topical and of real public interest.

The Human Rights Committee has made it clear that under no circumstances can an attack on a person for exercising freedom of expression be justified. ARTICLE 19 recalls the Joint Declaration of 25 June 2012 on Crimes Against Freedom of Expression which calls on States to create a new category of ‘crimes against freedom of expression’. Governments are under a duty to prevent, prohibit and protect people from, such crimes. International human rights law not only protects individuals from rights-violations by the State but also obliges the State to protect individuals from violations of their rights by other private individuals.

The African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights’ Resolution on the Safety of Journalists and Media Practitioners in Africa also notes that press freedom and freedom of expression can only be enjoyed when journalists are free from pressure, intimidation and coercion. Violence and other crimes against those exercising their right to freedom of expression, particularly journalists who investigate corruption and other issues of public interest, has a chilling effect on the free-flow of information.

ARTICLE 19 therefore calls upon the Kenyan Government to ensure that any allegations of threats or attacks on journalists are promptly and properly investigated. Perpetrators must be prosecuted and victims must be offered appropriate redress and remedy, whether civil or criminal, in order to protect the fundamental right to freedom of expression, and, in particular, media freedom.

Further information

A wife- or widow-inheritance is the practice in which a man inherits the widow of his deceased brother or other close relative. Originally a protective custom, reports abound that it is much abused and women are forced into sexual relations and, if inheritance is refused, women can be driven out of their communities.

Somalia / Radio Journalist escapes ‘assassination bid’

forwarded By Agwanda Saye

– – – – – – – – – – –

A Radio journalist for one of the broadcast media houses in Garowe, capital of Puntland Regional State of Somalia escaped assassination Thursday evening when armed men attacked him.

Abdifatah Gedi, editor-in-chief of Radio Daljir and the director of the branch of this station in Galkayo survived tonight from assassination attempt after group of men armed with pistols shot him several times at the entrance of Radio Daljir headquarters in Garowe. Some of the bullets reportedly went through Gedi’s shirt but fortunately he escaped uninjured.
. . .

read more of aticle;

http://appablog.wordpress.com/2012/08/03/somalia-radio-journalist-escapes-assassination-bid/

Former Ethiopian state radio journalist released

From: Agwanda Saye

Nairobi, July 11, 2012–A veteran Ethiopian state journalist who was twice imprisoned on vague corruption and copyright charges and recently convicted on the lesser charge was released today on account of a reduced sentence, local journalists said.

A panel of judges at the Lideta Federal High Court in the capital, Addis Ababa, sentenced Abdulsemed Mohammed, a former senior producer with government-controlled broadcaster Ethiopian Radio and Television Agency (ERTA), to three and half years in prison but said he could go free on account of time already served. The judges also put Abdulsemed on probation for two years, the local journalists said.
. . .
http://cpj.org/2012/07/former-ethiopian-state-radio-journalist-released.php

ETHEOPIA: HARSH SENTENCE ON JOURNALIST CONDEMNED

From: Agwanda Saye.

The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns the harsh prison sentences issued by Ethiopia’s High Court today for blogger Eskinder Nega and five independent journalists on vague and politically motivated terrorism charges.
. . .
http://cpj.org/2012/07/eskinder-nega-sentenced-to-heavy-prison-term.php#more

Journalists attack in Somalia

From: erasto agwanda

NUSOJ Condemns attack on journalist in northern Somalia
Posted On: Jul 13, 2012 (18:22:36)

The National Union of Somali Journalists (NUSOJ) today condemned the beating by security guards of regional governor of a TV journalist who was covering presidential campaign in Port town of Bossasso.

Ahmed Muse Ali, known Ahmed Jokar, who is reporter and representative of private Royal TV network was violently beaten on Thursday, 12 July, by security guards of Abdisamad Mohamed Gallan, governor of Puntland’s Bari region in northeastern Somalia, at International Village Hotel in Bossasso where the presidential campaign of one of the candidates standing for election of Somali President. Ali, who suffered injuries, was reportedly threatened by security guards that they would kill him if they see him at the function
. . .

http://www.nusoj.org/?zone=/unionactive/view_article.cfm&HomeID=251066

Kenya: Compare and Contrast

From: odhiambo okecth

Friends,

Dr Kofi Annan, the former Secretary General of the UN is not so well built in size, does not shout at all, does not engage in theatrics, yet, when he talks, the World Listens.

oto

— On Tue, 7/17/12, Kuria-Mwangi wrote:
From: Kuria-Mwangi
Subject: Fire-Spitting Miguna Miguna Heads To ICC To Brief Prosecutors, Seek Protection, Then Canada For Holiday
Date: Tuesday, July 17, 2012, 9:34 PM

This spin is now getting out of control. First it was the fake Miguna Miguna response to Sara Elderkin where we are now told that it was not Mig Mig and now we are being told by these knuckleheads that Mig Mig will be in Hague to spill the beans. This is why I keep on telling Lee to avoid the gutter press.

http://thejackalnews.com/index.php?dll=1240&readmore=1
JACKAL NEWS –

Fire-spitting Miguna Miguna, whose new book, Peeling Back The Mask: A Quest for Justice in Kenya rattled Prime Minister Raila Odinga and his allies, left the country overnight, headed to the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague to brief the prosecutors on his claims linking the premier to war crimes and seek protection, sources told the Jackal News, revelations that might recast events at the first permanent international tribunal.

See article – –
How Standard Group was Duped to Publishing Fake Miguna Reply
At – –
http://www.dennisitumbi.com/?p=515
Posted By Dennis Itumbi | 3:38 pm

http://www.kuria-mwangi.blogspot.com
http://www.facebook.com/kjmwangi

Kenya: Subversive and concocted malicious article on cotu leader Farncis Atwol has sparked sharp reaction by Kenyans in defence of the top unionist

Special Investigative Report by Leo Odera Omolo.

TOP UNION OFFICIALS IN Kenya have scathingly lashed out at a scribe who was recently involved in posting clandestine, concocted and subversive article to the websites ad social media sites which meant deliberately aimed at to tarnishing and discrediting the name of the hard working COTU {K} Secretary-General Francis Atwoli.

The anonymous author of the article which was posted to the African Press International {AIP} which is published in Oslo, Norway by a Kenyan journalist.

The author alleged that Mr Atwoli had taken street urchins and bogus journalists with him to Geneva during the annual convention meeting of the International Labor Organization purporting them to be genuine journalists fro Kenya, and his action had disappointed the authorities in Switzerland.

I further alleged that the bogus journalist were never sanction by the Kenya Union of Journalist {KUJ} the main umbrella of journalists in Kenya Our investigations has revealed that KUJ is an affiliate of COTU {K}.

The author of the maliciously damaging article had cowardly hidden his or her true identity while masquerading as the KUJ spokesman exposing his or her ill-motive towards Mr. Atwoli a highly respected unionist who has since taking over the mantle of COTU {K} has turned around the workers welfare.

Atwoli has contributed a lot the workers welfare making COTU {K} to be one of the most vibrant labor movements in Africa. This is who he is now wearing several hats in the labor movement not only I African continent, and beyond but also in the international labor movement. All the achievement and gains made in Kenya’s labor movement is as the result of Mr Atwoli’s untainted reputation, nearly all top unionist from all over Africa had travelled and conserved in Kisumu to witness the occasion during which Atwoli and his ea of lineup were returned to the9r offices unanimously and unanimously re-elected unopposed, signifying how the COTU [K} boss enjoyed the confidence of workers in Kenya and beyond.

In fact the annual gathering convened by COTU was a true Pan-Africanist Trade Union’s Convention in he true sense of the word, because all members of the Organization African
Judging from the crude language and poor English with which the article is written, its presentation and style is telling a lot about the academic background and professional ethics of the author.

One might be credibly tempted to suspect that the author is working in cohort of some disgruntled elements from within COTU hierarchy. If not so then he is a yellow scribe of the fifth column, who is envious about the few journalist whom ere lucky enough to have been picked by Atwoli and sponsored for the Geneva trip.

Alternatively this article could be attributed to be the work of one uncouth scribe within Kisumu who is well known for thriving on extortion. The semi-illiterate scribe his had to brush shoulder with the forces of law reinforcement for his lust for free money which has on occasions has landed him in courts for varied offences ranging from extortion, demanding money with menaces, attempted. The scribe’s excessive lust for fee money has put him in a very awkward position and at odd among his professional colleagues.

The suspect journalist is a frequent visitor to Kisumu Airport, especially during weekends where he always laying ambush to politicians returning home for the weekends. He is also the most regular at the departure lounge on Sundays sweet-talking to politicians, particularly moneyed MPs from Western Kenya trying to lay his hands on the residues left in their pockets after tiresome weekend activities in their respective rural constituencies.

Maybe Francis Atwoli the generous top trade has put in place some kind of economic embargo and no longer parting with handouts money, thus inviting the wrath of his former friend turned enemy. Who knows? However, leading players in labor movement in Kenya interviewed roundly condemned the author of this article describing him as some one ho has perfected in the arts of telling pack of lies.

It a case of misrepresentation, miscalculation and underestimation of the intelligence of the Kenya workers. It also calls for the thorough medical examination of the mental state of the author of this article. It could be the work of someone who is mentally deranged a needed treatment.

One politician who has seen the article described as the work of an insane writer who can simply wake up and imagine hoe to write silly and dirty thins bout M Atwoli a man who dedication to the cause of work and is clean record of selfishlessness serving in the labor movement in this country speaks for itself.

One union leader who request that his identity be hidden was bold enough by saying tat M Atwoli is held I the highest esteem by Kenyan workers in particular an the public in general and could even win the presidency of the Republic of Kenya if so wish or when he choose to stand and contest for the presidency, no body will stand on his way.

All the accusations and allegation contained therein in this articles are nothing, but the work f devilish and cocked minded.

Mr Atwoli is a happily married man with grownup children. The COTU boss has a well kept family and or anyone to portray him as someone who is sex-maniac and a playboy is out of bound.

What this article should be intended to achieve has flopped. Shown a copy of the article downloaded from a computer, one of the Kisumu based journalist who had travelled with Atwoli to Geneva last year jumped to he roof,

Jeff Otieno Aguko one of the scrbes who had traveled with Arwoli in Geneva with was full of praise of the COTU boss. He said to the Geneva was one of the most pleasant time he had ever enjoyed in his life time.He could no figure it out as to what prompted he author to write such rubbish o Mr Atwoli

“What this coward writer has written is full of phantom and fiction. The author appeared to be having fertile imagination and only deserves to be a fiction writer. He should direct his fertile imagination of fiction elsewhere, but leave Mr Atwoli alone.,” said Mr Aguko.

Ends
Ps More to follow

Africa – the Danger of a Single Story

From: Yona Maro


Karibu Jukwaa la www.mwanabidii.com
Pata nafasi mpya za Kazi www.kazibongo.blogspot.com
Blogu ya Habari na Picha www.patahabari.blogspot.com

– – – – – – – – – – –

By Paul Carlucci

The greatest enemy of any one of our truths may be the rest of our truths.

Africans have always spun their own narratives, and interpreted others from the broader world. Hieroglyphics described ancient Egypt to modern man. The anti-colonial dramas of Négritude roused passions around the Francophone world. In 1949, after rejecting the Roman alphabet, Solomana Kanté invented the N’Ko writing system, which revelled in the tonalities of West African Mande speakers and was used by devotees to translate all manner of scholarly and religious texts. Julius Nyerere translated Shakespeare’s “Julius Caesar” and “The Merchant of Venice” into Kiswahili.

Painters, historians, thespians, writers, filmmakers and musicians have all uploaded their stories into a greater narrative, some of whom have names which resonate globally, like Chinua Achebe, Fela Kuti, and Chéri Samba. And so have journalists, whether in the vaunted pages of South Africa’s Mail and Guardian or the infamous broadcasts of Rwanda’s Radio Télévision Libre de Milles Collines.

But there has long been a chorus of simplifying, erroneous, corrosive, and misleading narratives informing the popular impression of Africa outside the continent. These stories are historical, journalistic, and artistic. For Western audiences, imagining a true portrait of the continent, one that includes its banalities alongside its sensations, is a reverie too often disturbed by narrative productions suffering shortcomings in structure, spirit, and knowledge. Aside from the prejudices of early Western historians, there are also the conflict-constructions of both journalistic and dramatic storytelling to shade the picture.

All of these narratives – past, present and forthcoming – combine to give the world an ever-complicating impression of an immensely complicated place. They have been created over time by outsiders and insiders alike, as well as people whose identities borrow from both categories, like members of diasporic communities or the children of colonial settlers. They engage in dialogue with each other, holding conversations that enlighten the picture of Africa. But, in the Western imagination, stereotypical stories of famines, cheetahs and bullet-belts eclipse nearly everything. Increasingly, as with any serious effort to understand the world, it’s up to audiences to think critically, compare widely, and suspend their conclusions.

Visible transition: The symbolism of the Kony2012 backlash

Jason Russell could not have seen it coming. The backlash against Invisible Children and their Kony2012 campaign spread quickly enough, but such is speed these days that it seemed glacial as Russell’s video championed 70 million hits in a few days, with a reported $5 million in donations. Not only were the stories of Joseph Kony, Uganda, Sudan, the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) told through the narrowest and self-aggrandising of views, a broader impression was lent to millions of young people that one could learn enough to contribute to profound events in only a matter of about 29 minutes of brain-dope.

But there was a backlash, maybe on an unprecedented scale. By way of a comparison, the movie Machine Gun Preacher, a 2011 biopic flick based on the life of Sam Childers was another LRA narrative. It sailed into the popular imagination on a raft of misrepresentations, portraying Africa as a stage for monstrous, American criminals to gloriously reinvent themselves, canonising late rebel leader John Garang, promoting violence as the primary solution to a conflict it denuded of all its bulging nuance, and singing the praises of Jesus Christ as saviour. There were plenty of bad reviews, but nothing on par with the denial of Kony2012.

But Machine Gun Preacher, with its $45,000 opening weekend, didn’t have anything like the reach of Kony2012. Within six days of the latter’s March 5 release, it tallied 100 million hits on YouTube. Criticism poured in from major media entities like The Guardian and Washington Post, and Al Jazeera English hosted a Uganda Speaks forum and ran op-eds from preeminent African and on-the-ground voices. A Ugandan group also called Uganda Speaks launched its Kony2012 initiative to “recapture the narrative”. After a while, it seemed that most people who knew anything about the LRA knew that Kony2012 was a phenomenon of reductionist activism for a war already over.

It’s not likely that the critics reached entirely the same audience as Invisible Children. And even though the criticism did inspire a second video – ‘Beyond Famous’ – which sought to incorporate more Ugandan voices into its narrative, the impact of the first one, and really of Invisible Children’s entire existence, found a more prominent place in reality.

An April 29 New York Times article by Jeffrey Gettleman takes readers into the United States’ Kony-hunt in the Central African Republic, where General Carter Ham, head of the US Africa Command, has a Kony2012 poster on his door. An unnamed American official is quoted as saying: “Let’s be honest, there was some constituent pressure here. Did Kony2012 have something to do with this? Absolutely.” About two weeks later, in a positive development, US-supported Ugandan forces captured Caesar Acellam, a senior LRA commander. A layer of moral ambiguity emerges when one learns the chequered history of the Ugandan army, and indeed the ongoing allegations of human rights violations against it. Are entities like this where the world should be building capacity?

Ugwu’s reclamation

In Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s novel Half of a Yellow Sun, written about Nigeria’s Biafran War, the protagonist Richard is an awkward Englishman. Married to an Igbo woman, he finds himself writing propaganda for the Biafran cause, and at the same time struggling with different writing projects; a few failed efforts at foreign correspondence and novels that seem to go nowhere. Throughout the story, Richard struggles to integrate himself into the Igbo community, learning the language and scorning the reductionist worldviews of outsiders. Richard decides his novel will be about the war, but he still can’t complete it.

In the closing pages of the book, he confides in Ugwu, a peasant houseboy with a passion for reading who was conscripted into the Biafran army and participated in a gang rape. “The war isn’t my story to tell, really,” Richard decides; although he says nothing, Ugwu agrees. Richard survived the conflict, penned propaganda for its cause, and ultimately lost his wife to the violence. But the fractured war narrative laced into the broader story is written not by Richard, as the reader first assumes, but by Ugwu himself.

It’s a telling subplot, with tensions outside the text. In the winter 2005 edition of Granta Magazine, award-winning Kenyan writer Binyavanga Wainaina offered up a satirical guide for storytellers setting their tales in Africa. He took aim at that vast landscape of clichés writers go to in an effort to bring verisimilitude to their works: buzzwords like “darkness”, “big”, “sky”, “shadow” and “sun”; characters like prostitutes and guerrillas, props like AK-47s and bowls of monkey brains. Ugwu’s reclamation of story runs all through Wainaina’s subtext.

In 2009, Adichie put a name to these tensions: The Danger of a Single Story. Speaking at an international conference, she recounted her childhood years absorbed in British novels. Her own first literary efforts therefore featured white-skinned characters, with sparkling blue eyes, frolicking through the snow and enjoying apples. It wasn’t until she discovered Achebe – whose novel Things Fall Apart she channels in the first sentence of her Purple Hibiscus – that Adichie realised people like her, and settings like Nigeria, could be explored in the graceful rhythms of fiction. When she studied in the United States, she found a less complete global narrative in her roommate who couldn’t believe she could speak English and was dismayed to learn her favourite music had little to do with bare-chested drum circles. Adichie didn’t fault her new friend, but understood that her view of Africa had been shaped by “a single story of catastrophe”.

“A violent babble of uncouth sounds”

During her talk, Adichie highlighted the journal writings of the merchant John Locke, who travelled to West Africa in the 16th century. His scribbles depicted Africans as “beasts who have no houses”, and suffer from bizarre anatomical peculiarities. The dominance of this type of story also finds its origins in the writings of explorer and stooge Henry Morton Stanley, whose work for newspapers, magazines, and book publishers was rife with the kind of clichés that so amuse Wainaina.

There is a tradition of overturning these narratives, but the cultural penetration seems limited. 20th century historians wrote about colonial conquest as if it happened to a bunch of lackadaisical brutes, too caught up in primordial throes to resist the imperious Europeans. A more complicated picture has recently emerged, detailing a variety of local responses to European domination, ranging from armed resistance to self-interested collaboration. The tit-for-tat continues in analyses of more contemporary events, as in The London School of Economics’ African Affairs Professor Thandika Mkandawire’s 2002 paper, ‘The Terrible Toll of Post-Colonial “Rebel Movements” in Africa’, in which he accuses prominent researchers like Stephen Ellis of racist renditions.

Probably one of the most enduring turn-of-the-century fictions with implications for Africa is Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness, which has a long list of defenders and detractors. Among the latter group is Achebe, who, in a 1977 essay in the Massachusetts Review, categorised the book as “permanent literature”, one with a hallowed presence in Western schools, and its author a “thoroughgoing racist”. Achebe shrugged off any defence of the book, instead highlighting a pattern of racist developments from the nature of Conrad’s contrast between the Thames and the Congo to the author’s apparent reluctance to give his African characters the attribute of language, but instead “a babble of uncouth sounds”.

It’s been 35 years since Achebe wrote that essay. At the time, he identified a phenomenon much like the one Adichie isolated in her lecture. But Achebe added a worrying caveat: The telling of these stories had gone beyond wilful misrepresentation and into the realm of “reflex”.

Literature to the rescue?

While the Kony2012 backlash showed that simple and soaring narratives will not go unanswered, the fact is that a wider balance of stories is indeed emerging. Barbara Kingsolver’s The Poisonwood Bible, published in 1998, is an exceptional piece of fiction, an award-winner and Pulitzer nominee that utterly eschews simplicity in its story of independence-era Democratic Republic of the Congo. In 2006, author Dave Eggers partnered with Valentino Achak Deng to pen What is the What, a form-blending project originally planned as a piece of biographical journalism, but later presented as fiction to fill in the blanks of Deng’s memory growing up in war-torn Sudan. Christie Watson’s Tiny Sunbirds, Far Away, published last year, seems almost pleading in its entrance into Nigeria’s narrative landscape; she labours to bring hearty characterisation to her black cast, while her white characters are tediously trite and mono-dimensional.

But these are not the plots Wainaina is talking about. They hinge on events that typify the Western perception of Africa, namely civil conflict. In his 2011 memoir One Day I Will Write About This Place, Wainaina depicts a Kenyan childhood of choir practices, awkward school crushes, rampant acne, and radio DJs. When coups do surface in his Africa, they happen alongside these less sensational events, rather than eclipsing them. He deals with Private Hezekiah Ochuka’s 1982 coup and six subsequent hours of governance, with resulting body count, in two paragraphs that follow a quick vignette about his cracking voice, two inches of pubescent growth, and Michael Jackson dance moves. The conflict in Wainaina’s memoir is not so much with Kenya or South Africa, where he later sets up shop, but with his own destiny. Will he or will he not become a writer?

Taken together, Wainaina’s how-to and Ugwu’s reclamation are a kind of narrative gate-keeping. But at their most prescriptive, they flirt with xenophobia, especially in the silencing of Richard’s take on the Biafran War. As a character, Richard integrated himself into Igbo society, acquiring language and love, while at the same time promoting the cause. How much further does one have to go to get inside the gate? Why is his conflict with destiny beyond the kind of resolution Wainaina finds for himself? And if his actions are insufficient, then what about the narrative contributions of authors Alexandra Fuller and Mia Couto, two writers with membership in the second generation settler class? The former’s 2001 debut book and memoir, Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight, details her childhood in collapsing Rhodesia, and it vibrates with a tension pretty much defined against a backdrop of violence. (Incidentally, she’s a huge fan of Wainaina.) The latter is an award-wining poet, author, and biologist, known for The Last Flight of the Flamingo and dozens of other works; he is on the one hand acclaimed as Mozambique’s most important writer, and yet still accused of elitist urban credentials that segregate him from his lower-caste character material.

But misrepresentation can cut both ways. In her lecture, Adichie admitted to herself holding a similarly parodying story, not about Americans, but about Mexicans, her understanding of whom was both formed and tainted by United States popular media. In One Day I Will Write About This Place, Westerners who donate to African causes are typified as exclusively white and patronising, while the West is a multi-racial domain with a few enlightened minds. It happens elsewhere, too, like in Amma Darko’s Beyond the Horizon, published in 1995, which depicts Europe as a demoralising death trap of the soul for any African who attempts to live there. The immigrant experience may entail, increasingly, a galaxy of exhausting and sometimes fatal challenges, but it is not exclusively that. There are success stories everywhere.

All of this begs the question: Is it right to ask artists to run through a checklist of politically correct indicators before publishing their work? Or are partial truths of one kind acceptable if they lead to greater truths of another? And if conflict drives story, should some conflicts, like the Rhodesian war or resource exploitation and poverty in the Niger Delta, be off limits because they don’t tell the whole story of their true-life settings? Or does the real question, once we exclude actively racist art, have more to do with the receiving audiences, who, in forming impressions of the world, must seek out a variety of stories?

Defining the popular imagination…Or perhaps defying it

Unfortunately, we live in what Canadian author and literary critic Douglas Glover has called a post-literate age. Léopold Senghor, Senegal’s independence leader and champion of Négritude, once said it would be African writers and artists who would rebirth the culture, not politicians. But he did not see the arrival of the media era. As it is, none of the above literature will likely reach a mass audience and bring variety to the African narrative in the West, but the increasingly globalised field of media will.

That Africa is frequently sensationalised in Western media narratives is no great insight. Frederick Cooper, in his book Africa since 1940: The Past and the Present, traces the phenomenon to the Congo’s decolonisation, an image which is doubly reinforced in Nigeria’s Biafran war. It’s the kind of thing that promulgates a dramatic narrative. On the May 13, 2000, cover of The Economist, which carried an image of Africa’s landmass stencilled around the photo of an arms-toting African, the headline read “The Hopeless Continent”. The ghost of this depiction follows many storylines, like the reported misrepresentations in the BBC documentary The World’s Worst Place to be Gay?, and the unshakable prominence of coup, war, famine and dictator dispatches over other kinds of stories in media around the world. Freelance writer Travis Lupick summed up last year’s Horn of Africa famine news swell accordingly: “You know,” he posted on Twitter, “when there’s a drought in Iowa, we don’t write headlines like ‘North America struck by drought’. Africa’s a big place.”

But this is not just a case of the broader world imposing a reductive narrative structure on the continent; African journalists participate in the same melee. The most infamous example is the genocidal radio of early 1990s Rwanda. More benign examples can be found in Ghana’s 2011 media coverage of clashes between Fulanis and other northerners; it was sensationalist at best, and xenophobic at worst. A multitude of other problems, like low remuneration and politically – or ideologically – invested ownership, conspire to breed outcomes like blackmail journalism and hyper-partisan political coverage – and this from the countries that enjoy a free press. In others, pioneering journalism can get a person killed.

But as in the cases of literature, there are also neutralising forces in journalism. Al Jazeera’s “Africa Investigates” series brought African journalists like Sorious Samura and Anas Aremeya Anas to an international audience. In 2010, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation ran a four-part series called ‘Africa on the Move’ in which musical movements were explored alongside the ambitions of entrepreneurs. South Africa’s Mail and Guardian continues what Stephen Ellis has described as a tradition of enterprising journalism in that country. Meanwhile, scads of African journalists find employment with international entities like Bloomberg or Reuters. More recently, the BBC is about to transpose its Focus on Africa magazine to the broadcast realm, with a 30-minute daily broadcast anchored by Ghanaian Komla Dumor.

Conflict as a source of sensationalism

In his 2000 book Reporting Africa, Ellis defines news as “an attempt to represent reality by those employed for that purpose by organisations of mass communication”. He confounds that definition with layers of complexity about sources, subjects, national traditions, and industry economics. From that, one can extrapolate a carousel of particular horses ridden by particular editors, each trying to appeal to a particular audience. The subjectivity of reality becomes undeniable.

One common ground of rendering reality for all journalists is conflict. It may be unsavoury, but it cuts to the very heart of how any story, fiction or otherwise, is told. It’s what compels audiences to follow narratives, and audiences tend to follow certain types of conflict, sensational types, more readily than subtle ones. It’s why Anas and Samura (the latter well-known for his gruesome documentary Cry Freetown) focused on corruption for their Al-Jazeera documentaries, not college basketball. It’s why Aidan Hartley, a Kenyan-born journalist of the second-generation settler demographic, spent a career reporting conflict for Reuters, ultimately capturing his narratives in the memoir The Zanzibar Chest. This work leaves readers with the revelation that conflict stories are not just pernicious forces in the composition of an inclusive narrative, but also destructive to those who tell them. And it’s why editors continue to demand those kinds of tensions from reporters. They think it’s what audiences are geared toward.

For the most part, it seems they may be right. If identity is established not by what a person says about himself, but rather what is said about him, and how often, then it seems the real issue in understanding life is not entirely a question of how narratives are produced, but rather how they are ingested. Adichie has called for a blend of stories. As the number we receive increases, it becomes up to individuals to embrace them.

Paul Carlucci is a freelance writer who has reported from Ghana, Ivory Coast, China, Mexico and Canada. His work has been carried by Al Jazeera English, Toronto Star, IPS Africa, and others.

USA: Who Owns the News Media 2012

From: Yona Maro

Who Owns the News Media is an interactive database of companies that own news properties in the United States. Use the site to compare the companies, explore each media sector or read profiles of individual companies. It provides detailed statistics on the companies that now own our nation’s news media outlets, from newspapers to local television news stations to radio to digital, and this accompanying summary highlights the major changes of the year. With daily newspapers still providing the majority of original news reporting, what will these new owners mean for the future of our daily news? What is their background? What is the breadth of their news properties and their properties in other industries?

While there were no major ownership changes in ethnic media in the past year, mainstream media organizations made further inroads in the market. Fox, ABC News and Comcast all made moves to create stations and programming geared to Hispanic Americans, bringing in new competition to Univision, the largest Spanish language network and now the fourth largest network overall.

http://stateofthemedia.org/media-ownership/


Karibu Jukwaa la www.mwanabidii.com
Pata nafasi mpya za Kazi www.kazibongo.blogspot.com
Blogu ya Habari na Picha www.patahabari.blogspot.com

MEDIA TO BE AVAILABLE FOR THE SENTENCING OF ETHIOPIAN JOURNALIST

Fordarded By Agwanda Saye

– – – – – – – – – – –

On June 21, the government of Ethiopia is due to announce a verdict in the case of local journalist and blogger, Eskinder Nega, who faces a potential life sentence on vague terrorism charges that followed his writings discussing the Arab Spring and criticizing the government’s use of terrorism legislation to jail dissidents. Since his arrest in 2011, CPJ has been closely monitoring Eskinder’s case and advocating for his release.

Regional experts from the Committee to Protect Journalists are available in New York and Nairobi for interviews on Eskinder’s case and Ethiopia’s press freedom record.

. . .

select
http://www.afrik-news.com/pressrelease9575.html
for rest of article;

REFUGEE JOURNALISTS WORRIES IN EAST AFRICA.

By Agwanda Saye.

East African journalists fleeing violence in their countries make up nearly half of the more than 450 journalists forced into exile in the past five years, the Committee to Protect Journalists found in its “Journalists in Exile 2012” report marking World Refugee Day.

“There is a journalist refugee crisis in East Africa that has drastically affected the region’s ability to maintain media institutions that provide reliable, vital information,” said Maria Salazar-Ferro, CPJ Journalist Assistance program coordinator and co-author of the report. “After enduring violence and threats, these journalists fled for their lives, only to land in a state of prolonged uncertainty as governments and the U.N. refugee agency process their cases.”

In the past year, more than a quarter of the 57 journalists who fled their homes came from an East African nation. The greatest number fled violence in Somalia, where six journalists have been killed in 2012 and no journalist murders have been prosecuted since 1992. Eritrea and Ethiopia, East Africa’s worst jailers of journalists, also lost many to exile. Journalists also sought refuge from targeted attacks and threats in conflict-ridden Syria and Pakistan.

CPJ’s annual survey of journalists in exile counts those who fled due to work-related persecution in the past 12 months and provides an overview of the past five years. Dozens of journalists seeking asylum without the legal right to work nor access to basic services live in desperate, insecure, and impoverished conditions, CPJ research shows. To help journalists reach safe destinations, regain stability, and earn a living, CPJ’s Journalist Assistance Program works with other organizations to optimize advocacy, logistical, and financial support. A special effort is being made to help East African journalists deal with this crisis.

Local Journalists released in Central Somalia

By Agwanda Saye in Somali

National Union of Somali Journalists (NUSOJ) welcome Ahlu Sunna waljama release the two journalists arrested in the Somalia’s central town of Dhusomareb two days ago were illegally sentenced to three months jail by the Sufi militia run local court and submitted to the central prison in the town but later released with the help of The National Union of Somali Journalists (NUSOJ) on Thursday.

But after many contacts with the Sufi Ahlu-Suna rulers in Dhusomareb, the NUSOJ officials succeeded to convince the court judge the charge against the journalists was baseless and they were released on Wednesday at 06:00 PM local time.

The journalists were sued with an false charges on accusing them of a news coverage describing the Ahlu-Suna fighters as clan based militia bandits but that case lacked any evidence.

The chairman of Ahlu-Suna Sheik Ibrahim Sheik Hassan Guureeye told NUSOJ he will intervene the case and correct the faults within the administration. Ibrahim has opologized over the journalists’ arrests and pledged for NUSOJ that this won’t happen and those who were behind it will be brought before justice.

The man behind the reports’ arrests who is the chairman of the security board in Dhusomareb town Farhan Sheik Ali has himself paid an excuse over this order pointing it as a mistake which came into misunderstanding.

Journalist Abdirahman Moalim Ahmed described their arrest as in violation of their freedom. They were beaten and tortured to confess un existed and uninvolved crime.

Militias loyal to the local Sufi militias, Ahlu Suna Wal-Jama raided the offices of the Radio Voice of Central Dhusamareb (Idaacadda Codka Bartamaha Dhusamareb) based in Dhusamareb on Tuesday morning around 6:20am local time, where they have seriously beaten and arrested Bashir Mohamed Salad Aka Bashir Sanka who contributes both Dalsan Radio, a privately owned independent radio station based in Mogadishu and Idacada Codka Bartamaha, an independent radio station based Dhusamareb and Abdi Jamal Moalim Ahmed, who is the correspondent of Radio Bar-Kulan, a UN Funded radio.

The Shabab, which is affiliated to Al-Qaeda looted the Radio equipment twice after raiding the town and briefly taking it over, there has been similar fears within the residents after the Ahlu Sunna Waljama militias supported by the Ethiopian troops abandoned the town of Elbur, a strategic town in central Somalia this weekend.

On 5th June, 2012, The Deputy Security Chief of the town’s Security Committee, Mr. Nor Elmi Hoosagale threatened the journalists after similar episode, of which the town’s people evacuated the town, took place.

On June 8, 2012 Two unknown assailants armed with pistols shot twice Mohamed Noor Mohamed better known as Mohamed Sharif – reporter for the Bar-Kulan Radio – below the heart which penetrated the back and the stomach on Friday evening June 8, 2012 around 7:30pm local time near Horn Cable Television office in Hamarjajab neighborhood as he was returning from work. The attackers fled the area immediately, according to witnesses.

CALL FOR INVESTIGATIONS OVER ATTACK ON JOURNALIST IN ANGOLA.

By Agwanda Saye in Cabinda.

Authorities in Angola’s enclave of Cabinda must immediately launch an investigation into the robbery at the home of an independent journalist on Sunday, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today.

Unidentified assailants ransacked the house of José Manuel Gimbi, a correspondent of the U.S. government-funded broadcaster Voice of America and a human rights lawyer, at around 4 p.m., when no one was at home, the station reported. The assailants stole items related to the journalist’s work, including two computers, an external hard drive, a voice recorder, two USB sticks, and a bag containing important documents related to his work, Arão Tempo, a lawyer and Gimbi’s mentor, told CPJ. VOA reported that the assailants also stole some personal items, including books and jewelry belonging to Gimbi’s wife.

Although the motive for the attack was unclear, local journalists told CPJ they believed the assailants were targeting items used by Gimbi for his professional work. VOA reported that Gimbi had not reported any threats recently. The journalist filed a complaint with Cabinda’s police Criminal Investigation office, but officers had not yet visited the house, Tempo told CPJ.

Gimbi is one of only two independent journalists in Cabinda, a volatile region where the government is locked in a conflict with a low-level separatist insurgency. He had recently interviewed members of opposition party UNITA about their objection to proposed government amendments to the electoral law ahead of parliamentary elections scheduled in August. Last week, he reported from Abuja on a forum of experts and civil society members, where participants raised issues that included wealth disparity in oil-rich countries like Angola.

Gimbi has been targeted for his independent reporting and human rights advocacy in the past, according to CPJ research. In August 2011, gunmen raided his home and threatened unspecified harm against him, CPJ research shows.

“We condemn the attack of the home of José Manuel Gimbi, who is the ongoing target of threats and persecution for his independent reporting in Cabinda,” said CPJ Africa Advocacy Coordinator Mohamed Keita. “We hold authorities in Cabinda responsible for Gimbi’s well-being and call on them to explore all leads in the case, including a political motive linked to the sensitive nature of the journalist’s work.”

Romão Macário Lembe, the vice-governor of Cabinda, told CPJ today that he was not aware of the burglary. “I have not heard anything, either on radio or in the independent newspapers. There are things that people say on the airwaves of VOA that are not true. My first reaction is to cast doubt on your information. But I am not saying that it is false, either. I am going to try to find out.” He also suggested the robbery could have been a random act. “Here, robberies are numerous. The robbers come from neighboring countries and go back there. We lead investigations, but we never find them.”

Kenya: The reported attack on journalists in Oyugis Town is a case of phantom and fiction reporting

THE REPORTED ALLEGED ATTACK ON JOURNALISTS IN OYUGIS TOWN WHILE INVESTIGATING A DEFILEMENT CASE WAS NOT TRUE BUT A FAILED BOTCHED EXTORTION MISSION,

Reports Leo Odera Omolo In Oyugis Town

The highly highlighted incident which took place last week at Oyugis Town in which for journalists who were on an investigative mission to probe the lead story of defilement was blown out of proportion and should’t have attracted such widest publicity.

It has been established beyond any reasonable doubt that the incident in question which attracted sharp reaction and wholesale condemnation from certain quarters was nothing more than a case which only fit into description of “Stranger than fiction.”

Among hose who strongly and unreservedly condemned he incident was the outspoken Oloo Janak who called upon the government to ensure that journalists were free to go about their duties unhindered.

The other reaction came fro the Kasipul-Kabondo MP Oyugi Maguwanga in whose constituency covered Oyugis Town where the alleged attack took place in Rachuonyo district within Homa-Bay County.

The legislator termed the incident as an infringement of human rights and asked the government o accord the journalists with maximum security protection so that they can go about their work unhindered.

It was reported that the for journalists Otieno Owida, Ouko Okusa, Brianb Yonga and Tom Otieno all of the Nation Media Group were reported to have gone to Oyugis Town to conduct an on the spot investigation in a case where a Form Two school girl who is a student in one of the local secondary school had been defiled by a politician who is an aspirant in the Kasipul-Kabondo parliamentary constituency and that the newsmen were attacked by the supporter of the politician.

What has emerged is that before the journalists visited Oyugis, unknown persons had sent some shocking and heart-throbbing SMS messages through the mobile phone of the politician whose name was adversely mentioned in relation to the alleged defilement case.

The sender of the SMS messages had asked the politician to coff-out a colossal amount of money to the tune of Kshs 250,000 so that the alleged adverse maliciously damaging story incriminating his name with the alleged defilement case could not find its way into to the newspaper columns.The politician whose name cannot be mention due to legal complications was told be the sender of the SMS message that the story if published would ruin him destroy his future as a politician and a parliamentary aspirant.

At first the politician said he ignored the message and treated as a common case of extortion.But he quickly changed his mind and contacted some of his supporters who were roaming about within Oyugis Town to conduct investigations to find out what was going on.

His men went into town and strategically stationed themselves inside a bar which is owned by one of the journalists.However, within minutes the team of journalists pulled up in a newspaper omany van and parked it outside the bar.

They were accompanied by a woman who immediately stared consuming beer. The woman had come with her daughter who is ageing about 18 years and who was in full school uniform.

This the girl who it was being alleged had been defiled by the politician. The battery of journalists then set their cameras and video tape recorders and began interviewing the girl and her mother separately on different tables.

The supporters of the politician who had earlier taken position in strategic corners with the bar then swung into action protesting against the presence of the girl in school uniform in the pub.

It was then when the shouting match started inside the bar, attracting the attention of a large number of onlookers who move close threatening to beat u the journalist, while alleging that they had been bought by the politicn’s opponents to discredit him.

Sensing that they were outnumbered, the newsmen took to their heels and drove out in high speed leaving he woman her daughter behind.

The woman who is a widow and having difficulty in raising school fees for her daughter has since admitted that he was lured into the conspiracy after one of the journalists had told her that they would publish the story of her daughter’s claims sensitize her plight and this could attract some donor agencies who could come to hi id. She alleged that the group had told her that the donor agencies would donate Ksh 200,000 for her daughter’s further education and even purchase the solar light and have it installed in her home.

The woman readily admitted that the politician in question was a member of her close family, and that on various occasions she has been working for the politician helping him as one of the cooks whenever the politician had visitors in his homestead.

It later emerged that the defilement story had been manufactured by the rivals of the politician and their agents with the aims and objective of discrediting the politician so that his popularity within the community could e adversely affected.

The incumbent MP Oyugi Maguwanga is one of he two leading contenders for the newly created Kasipul parliamentary seat which was hived out of the old Kasipul-Kabondo by the Interim Independent Electoral and Boundary Commission {IEBC as one of the 89 new additional parliamentary seats countrywide.

Residents of Oyugis Town and its environ spoke scarcely about many incidents of”dirty campaigns involving several aspirants competing for the same seat. They have hired many goons who re engaged in spreading all sorts’ malicious rumors after rumors against those perceived to be credible opponents.

The residents were only wondering as to what interests should journalists from a reputed media house get themselves into the murky constituency politics in Kasipul. And should they act at the behest of opponents of the politician in question. On question which is still lingering in the minds of many people within the locality included; who invited he newsmen all the way from Kisumu to Oyugis?

If there was a genuine of defilement, the family of the girl should have reported the incident to the Oyugis Police Station who in turn could have ordered for the medical examination of the victim.

The local view the whole episode as the botched extortion mission, which failed badly and simply reduced the scribes as “greedy mercenaries” for hire.

The journalists had acted like local political hirelings.

Reached on phone the politician, whose name had featured prominently in the botched case of naked extortion, said he knew all along that his rivals were busy at work planning dirty tricks to soil his name. He vowed that he was soldiering on with his parliamentary ambition and he is not cowed by the dirty tricks and will meet his rivals at the ballot box in March next year. He only

request for their kindness to conduct clean and gentlemen campaign

Meanwhile the ODM branch in the region has taken up the matter and threatens to discipline whoever is involved in slanderous campaign targeting his or her opponent for character assassination.

The ODM officials in the region want the police to investigate the incident to its best conclusion.

Ends