Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Out of Africa

smaller text tool iconmedium text tool iconlarger text tool icon

Out_of_Africa11072011Shooting the messenger...

A major conference has just found that the use of government advertising to reward or punish news media alongside government takeovers of media or the setting up of parallel government media networks in several countries continue to be powerful weapons used to prevent or manipulate the free flow of information. In other words government censorship and control is rife, while media freedom is a myth in these parts.


Related news items:
Newer news items:
Older news items:

Relax. They were not talking about Africa (not this time). The conference in question was the 67th General Assembly of the Inter American Press Association (IAPA) held recently in Lima, Peru, and the reference was to a number of Latin American countries.

For example, in Hugo Chávez’s glorious Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, that socialist beacon of freedom and hope to oppressed people everywhere, the government has unceremoniously shut down more than 30 privately owned radio and television stations, while it has also purchased or set up news media of its own.

The previously oppressed people may apparently hear and read only what the government allows them . The truth, it seems, is bad for good people.

Having managed to slip past the government censor, this very regretful news from the lands of Bolivar, Peron, Guevara, Chávez, Pinochet, Castro and other illustrious personae brought to mind the question of what the position might be in Africa.

Much has been written and said the past two years about real or perceived threats to the very free and independent media in South Africa. But what is the position in the rest of Africa? Just how free and independent are the messengers of good and bad tidings, or are they getting shot?

For instance, Botswana and Zimbabwe offer two very different examples of media oppression.

Limited media freedom only recently returned to Zimbabwe after Robert Mugabe’s government had previously managed to shut down all but the state-owned media through harassment, applying draconian laws and measures, requiring massive media registration deposits, confiscating media companies’ computers and printing works, turning down registration applications, and assaulting, arresting and detaining editors and journalists. These measures gave rise, however, to a flourishing Zimbabwean media in exile.

Botswana - where the first newspaper came off the presses way back in 1857 – chose a more sophisticated, more “democratic” route. The government here professes to conscientiously subscribe to the constitutional requirement for a free media and freedom of information.

And indeed, the country has a small variety of privately-owned print and online publications, radio stations and one TV station that operate alongside the dominant state-owned print and broadcast entities. In fact, the Botswana government controls the content of nearly all radio and television broadcasts through the state-run Botswana Press Agency (BOPA), which also produces the free Daily News, the country’s only major newspaper.

But that limited media freedom is also being threatened. After a decade long struggle the ruling Botswana Democratic Party managed in 2008 to push through parliament the Media Practitioners Act.

The matter was wrapped in sheepskins with government paying lip service to upholding and protecting free media and free information flow. But the Act, and its proposed statutory press council, to be controlled by a politically-appointed cabinet minister, severely threaten media freedom in Botswana. The implementation of the Act, however, has been badly frustrated so far by civil society, media groups and the Botswana Law Society.

Although state-owned radio is the dominant news service in Mozambique, and following the socialist period under Samora Machel when all media were state-owned and controlled, and despite high illiteracy levels, Mozambique today has a constitutionally protected and vibrant private media sector.

In contrast in Angola, also a former Portuguese colony like Mozambique, the media is predominantly state-owned and controlled by the formerly Marxist MPLA party led by the long-ruling Jose Eduardo dos Santos. A party-owned newspaper is the only daily, while a few privately-owned weeklies exist.

Although the media in the Democratic Republic of Congo is free and protected, working journalists are often subjected to verbal and physical abuse by government members and officials. In Malawi privately-owned media is viewed with suspicion by the government which has lately cracked down harshly on it, restricting its freedom.

Kenya is one of the more media-friendly African countries with a vibrant, independent media sector. In Cameroon media freedom is constitutionally guaranteed but in practice much of the media is government controlled and government censorship frequently prevents non-government political viewpoints making it into print or onto the airwaves, and harassment of journalists is common.

Nigeria historically has one of the most free and outspoken media traditions in Africa. But under successive military regimes, and even until quite recently under civilian rule, journalists have been harassed, kidnapped, tortured, imprisoned and killed. The situation, however, has recently improved somewhat.

Among the more media-friendly countries of Africa these days – though sometimes not without limitations - one can count Uganda, Ghana, Lesotho, Egypt, Algeria, Liberia, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Ethiopia, Mali, Zambia and Namibia.

And among the more restrictive or media-intolerant countries are Sudan, Ivory Coast, Gabon, Somalia, Swaziland and Equatorial Guinea among more.

The bottom-line however, which should be a headline, is that we in Africa probably have as much if not more reason to be concerned as our Latin American friends when it comes to tolerance, freedom and independence of the media.

Stef Terblanche

Comments (0)
Write comment
Your Contact Details:
Comment:
Security
Please input the anti-spam code that you can read in the image.
Move
-

Recent Articles

Top Headline

Football watch

Football watch

Pirates do it again Benni McCarthy for Orlando Pirates and Didier Drogba for Chelsea dominated the  highlight packages of the past week’s football. Both secured a league trophy for their respective teams with match-winning performances.

Read More...

Rugby watch

Rugby watch

SA teams dominate the Super 15 log The DHL Stormers are back at the summit of the Vodacom Super Rugby log thanks to another dedicated defensive effort against the Waratahs. With the Bulls and the Sharks, after a bonus-point win over the Free State Cheetahs, three South African teams are now amongst the top six in the Super 15 competition....

Read More...

Europe

Europe

The socio-political spinoff of economic difficulty Most of the attention in Europe since the election shocks in France and Greece has been focused on whether France and Germany can keep a solid working relationship going in dealing with the continent's protracted financial crisis. However, deeper analysis suggests that the European...

Read More...

Local Politics

Local Politics

The broader picture behind the DA and Cosatu clash With 75%, or three million, of South Africans aged between 18 and 34 unemployed, last week’s clash between the Democratic Alliance (DA) and the South African Congress of Trade Unions (Cosatu) is but the tip of the iceberg of a complex problem. Much more is at stake than just the...

Read More...

Worth a read

Worth a read

Apartheid’s Endgame Endgame is a book about South Africa's recent political history that saw the end of apartheid and the pre-dawn of democracy. It also has a lot to say about the now and the hopes and the fears for the country's future.

Read More...
Leadership magazine is South Africa's number one award winning business magazine having won the Tabbie Gold Award for Best Single Issue in the world (TABPI), PICA Awards for Magazine of the Year, Best Publication, Editor of the Year, Cover Design

The Leadership Bullentin


Archive