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Public trust in the media is at a new low: a radical rethink of journalism is needed

Public trust in the media is at a new low: a radical rethink of journalism is needed

A recent report by an independent panel on the ethics and credibility of South Africa’s news media makes for worrying reading. The panel, headed by retired judge Kathy Satchwell, was commissioned by the South African National Editors’ Forum following a series of ethical lapses by the Sunday Times. The paper dominated the country’s media landscape for over 100 years. As the largest by circulation, it was also considered the most powerful newspaper. HERMAN WASSERMAN, Professor of Media Studies in the Centre for Film and Media Studies, University of Cape Town The lapses included factual inaccuracies in reports on allegations of…
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Nigerian regulator tells TV stations to curb reporting on violence

Nigerian regulator tells TV stations to curb reporting on violence

NIGERIA’S broadcasting regulator has asked TV stations to curb their reporting of insecurity in the country by withholding details of incidents and victims, in what a leading civil society group described as a “sweeping gag order”. Africa’s most populous nation is facing multiple security crises, with the northeast in the grip of a decade-long Islamist insurgency, the northwest hit by a wave of mass abductions of schoolchildren, and kidnappings for ransom rife in many states. Some experts say the surge in criminality is partly driven by economic hardship caused by the COVID-19 shock in 2020, while the World Bank has…
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Algerian journalist released after presidential pardon

Algerian journalist released after presidential pardon

KHALED Drareni, an Algerian journalist whose imprisonment led to several protests that highlighted the state crackdown on freedom of expression, has been released after he received a presidential pardon. Drareni was serving two years in prison, reduced from three years, after he was convicted of charges which included “threatening national unity” and "inciting unarmed gatherings". Drareni was jailed with activists Samir Benlarbi and Slimane Hamitouche, who were found guilty of inciting unarmed gatherings.
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Moroccan court sentences striking dissident journalist to five years in jail

Moroccan court sentences striking dissident journalist to five years in jail

A Moroccan court in Casablanca on Friday handed a five-year jail sentence to Moroccan dissident journalist Soulimane Raisouni on sexual assault charges, which he denies, in a case that outraged human rights advocates in the country. Raisouni has been on a hunger strike for over 80 days to protest his pre-trial detention since May 2020. The plaintiff and witnesses were heard in the absence of Raisouni and his defence which had withdrawn from attending hearings since Tuesday citing concerns about a fair trial. "A fair trial cannot take place in the absence of the defendant himself," said his lawyer Souad…
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Tunisian journalists protest over new head of state news agency

Tunisian journalists protest over new head of state news agency

TAREK AMARA TUNISIAN police yesterday clashed with journalists at the state news agency demonstrating against a new chief executive whose appointment they see as an attempt to undermine editorial independence. Dozens of protesting journalists had gathered in front of Tunis Afrique Presse's (TAP) headquarters to try to stop Kamel Ben Younes from entering, but police later forced a way in. "TAP is free and police must go," the journalists chanted. Protesting journalists say Ben Younes is too close to the moderate Islamist Ennahda, the biggest party in parliament. They accuse him of backing moves to control the press before the…
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New head of Tunisian state news agency quits after protests

New head of Tunisian state news agency quits after protests

THE new head of Tunisia's state news agency has resigned after its journalists demonstrated against his appointment in protest at what they called an attempt to undermine editorial independence. After Kamel Ben Younes' resignation, the journalists' syndicate said it would cancel its first-ever strike planned for April 22 and end a boycott of news about the government. Dozens of protesting journalists had gathered in front of Tunis Afrique Presse's (TAP) headquarters on April 13 to try to stop Ben Younes from entering, but police later forced a way in and beat journalists. "I resigned to avoid being involved in political…
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Punitive laws are failing to curb misinformation in Africa. Time for a rethink

Punitive laws are failing to curb misinformation in Africa. Time for a rethink

MISINFORMATION, best understood as false or misleading information whether or not it was intended to mislead, has long been recognised as a problem worldwide. Together with disinformation, which is spread deliberately to misinform or mislead, it constitutes a key part of the information disorder distorting public debate around the world. PETER CUNLIFFE-JONES, Visiting Researcher & Co-Director Chevening African Media Freedom Fellowship, University of Westminster ALAN FINLAY, Lecturer: Journalism and Media Studies, University of the Witwatersrand ANYA SCHIFFRIN, Director, Technology, Media, and Communications specialization, School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University Concern about the effects of misinformation on individuals and…
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Equipped by US & Israeli firms, police in Botswana search phones for sources

Equipped by US & Israeli firms, police in Botswana search phones for sources

ORATILE Dikologang was naked when police officers pulled black plastic over his head during his detention in April 2020. It was difficult to breathe, but the interrogation continued, he told CPJ in a recent phone interview. “What are your sources, where do you get information,” he recalled them asking repeatedly. “It was the most painful experience,” he said. Dikologang, the digital editor and co-founder of the Botswana People’s Daily News website, and two others still face jail time in relation to Facebook posts that police were investigating when they hauled the three in for questioning. CPJ documented the incidents, and made several attempts to…
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Trial of Moroccan journalists raises fears of repression

Trial of Moroccan journalists raises fears of repression

AHMED ELJETCHTIMI NEW hearings took place yesterday in the trials of two dissident journalists in Morocco accused of sexual assault, whose detention rights groups see as evidence of increasing state repression and a push to silence dissent. The two men, Soulimane Raisouni and Omar Radi, who both deny the accusations against them, have spent a year in pre-trial detention and Raisouni has been on hunger strike for over two months, raising concerns about his health. The cases have brought into focus fears that the ruling authorities are increasingly intolerant of dissent and will manipulate Moroccan law to silence critics, a…
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Kidnapped French journalist’s plea

Kidnapped French journalist’s plea

A journalist who disappeared last month in Mali's northern city of Gao appeared in a video today, appealing to authorities to do everything they can to free him from Islamist militants holding him. "I'm Olivier Dubois. I'm French. I'm a journalist. I was kidnapped in Gao on April 8 by the JNIM (al Qaeda North Africa). "I'm speaking to my family, my friends and the French authorities for them to do everything in their power to free me," Dubois said in a 21-second video shared on social media. French civilians have long been favoured targets for kidnapping by criminal and…
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