African media should take the lead in telling the 'African story'

The early generations of Pan African journalists, at the turn of the nineteenth century, realised that they needed to give voice to the aspirations of their people. Many started their own newspapers.

Friday, July 15, 2016

The early generations of Pan African journalists, at the turn of the nineteenth century, realised that they needed to give voice to the aspirations of their people. Many started their own newspapers.

The mass media on the continent and beyond played a critical role in the struggles for liberation.  It exposed the cruelty and exploitation of colonialism, and played a role in mobilizing the African people towards their liberation struggles.

They covered the battles and manifestos, helped to mass-produce pamphlets and carried the messages of liberation in popular media through cartoons and comic strips, and many other forms.

They helped shape a narrative of liberation and independence.

At the same time, some newspapers and journalists also perpetuated the ideology that justified colonialism and the slave trade with its narrative of ‘the white man’s burden, darkest Africa, the seduction of the primitive.’

As we celebrated 50th years since the formation of the OAU/AU, we sought to define the mission of current generations of Africans, to define the Africa we want. Thus drawing from past experiences, and our desire to write our own future, we developed Agenda 2063.

We did so, through a wide range of unscripted consultations with various stakeholders, sectors within the continent and the Diaspora. We did not meet the Editors Forum, but some journalists participated in these consultations.

Twenty-two years ago in Rwanda, Radio Television Milles Collins (RTLM) and the Kangaru newspaper had journalists and editors who crafted, disseminated and rolled out an agenda of hatred, inciting and instigating the population to perpetrate violence, gross human rights violations and genocide against their neighbours and fellow Rwandese.

Twenty-two years later, the memories are still fresh. I visited the (Genocide) Memorial, and every time it makes me cry.  It is a shame that journalists were part of that agenda, indeed it is a shame on all of us. We must continue to reflect on this history, as we shape our continental agenda, including working towards silencing the guns and we must all say, never again.

Conflicts will always be there, but if and where it arises, it must be resolved through dialogue and discussions, not through the barrel of the guns.

Media and mass communications play an important role to inform, educate, and to influence public opinion. Responsible journalism speaks truth to power and is therefore essential to democracy, to development and to transformation.  The African media, in its great diversity, has a responsibility and an important role to play, to promote Pan-Africanism and Africa’s Renaissance, as we seek to implement Agenda 2063, and to hold us accountable in the decisions we take and their implementation.

Media is influenced as much by prevailing culture, political systems and media freedoms, as it is by issues of media ownership and diversity, and by the changes in media technologies. New technology and social media have democratized and massified access to information and the creation of content, while at the same time present new challenges with fast-travelling, often unverified reporting.

Information is a public good, from the perspective of both development and democracy. This ranges from information on the prevention of disease as we have seen with the HIV pandemic, with malaria and more recently with the Ebola epidemic and now Yellow Fever.

Media and information also protects consumers, farmers and artisans by creating access to information about prices of commodities so that they are not cheated by middlemen, due to lack of information and comparison.

Moreover, during elections media plays a pivotal role by providing citizens with information about political parties, candidates they vote for, election issues and accurate reporting of results.

Media can and should give voice to the powerless, bringing to the forefront the problems faced by citizens, disseminating warnings about disasters and report on whether government lives up to its policies. That is why it is so important that media should be credible, responsible and responsive.

It plays a critical role in shaping narratives, and therefore in socialization. The media holds up, or should hold up, a mirror to our society, giving us a sense of what we look like.

Societies and governments, on the other hand, have the responsibility to ensure and defend freedom of expression and the media. Journalists should not be punished for telling the truth and our policies and laws must create frameworks for these rights and responsibilities.

The roles of the media are influenced by a range of factors including the diversity of African voices, in a changing continent.  Diversity and voices are important for Africa, perhaps more so than in any other continent, because of our history.

More specifically, it is important because of what author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie refers to as the danger of the single story, of creating stereotypes, of incomplete stories (and analysis), where one dominating narrative becomes the only story.

Within the context of the recent Africa rising discourse, the dominant narrative tend to focus on our growing urban middle class as a mass consumer market for global products – from cars to cell phones, to clothes, to pharmaceuticals, to food.

So the African consumer markets are disaggregated, segmented and analysed, yet the real questions are why Africa produces only 2% of the pharmaceuticals it consumes, why it imports an estimated 83% of process food it consumed food, and why, despite the fact that Africa is the major producer of Columbite-tantalite-coltan for short – a key component in everything from mobile phones and computer chips, to stereos and VCRs[1], it imports almost all of these consumer goods. We need to add this part of the story.

This is the dominant narrative about Africa rising, because the rest of the world remains interested in our raw materials and now in our people as part of their consumer markets. For Africans, the real narrative should be about how a growing Africa contributes to eradicate poverty, by skilling its people, industrializing, building infrastructure, increase access to basic services and creating jobs.  The focus on the middle class also hides a perspective, which does not advocate for working people to earn wages to make a decent living, and we happily accept the working poor as a fact of life. Why should anyone wake up in the mornings, do a decent day’s work, for 48 hours a week, and not able to put food on their tables and send their children to school. We must compare what multinational companies pay workers in Africa and elsewhere in the world.

As we therefore transform Africa, including changing its fate from an exporter of raw materials to manufacturing for its own domestic market of over a billion people and growing, Africa as a consumer market for others should not become our single story.

The other single story, I want to talk about, is the narrative about the importance of overseas development aid and foreign direct investment for African development. And yet, the continent already funds since  2009 Africa over 85% of its development.

Out there, this part of the story is not told. This plays into our own understanding that without help and from a benevolent other, we can achieve nothing.  We thus buy into our own lack of capacity, or as one writer put it, Africa is destined for underdevelopment and therefore be on our permanent need of a disability benefit from the world in the form of aid. This mindset will persist if we don’t tell the full story.

There is a lot we are doing already and that we can do for ourselves.

There is yet another single story, which must be challenged, and challenged with determination, and that is the stereotypes about women in the media.

The findings of the Gender Media Baseline Study by GenderLinks and the Media Institute of Southern Africa of 2003, a study covering over 25,000 news items in ten Southern African countries is highly instructive. According to the study: