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In
text-message reporting, opportunity and risk
Tom
Rhodes, Committee to Protect Journalists
February 10, 2009
http://cpj.org/2009/02/text-messaging-africa.php
As votes in the Kenyan
presidential election were being counted in precincts nationwide,
reporters were relaying the tallies by text message back to newsrooms
in Nairobi. The count, which was in turn updated regularly online
and in other media, appeared to show opposition candidate Raila
Odinga pulling away to a historic victory.
But when the official
results were announced two days later, on December 29, 2007, the
verdict was shocking: Incumbent Mwai Kibaki was the winner. International
election monitors would later find fraud in the national vote counting,
something Kenyans sensed from the earliest moments, thanks to the
early poll reports from journalists using cell phone-based SMS,
or short message service.
This powerful communication
tool would soon prove both boon and bane as the country struggled
through ethnic rioting that claimed hundreds of lives. Text-message
reporting would circumvent government censorship and cast an important
spotlight on the violence--even as many SMS users spread vitriol
and threats across the landscape.
"New information
technology is a mixed bag of blessings," said Catherine Gicheru,
editor of the daily Nairobi Star. "It definitely helped in
the election coverage: You could be told in real time election results
in far-off, remote constituencies. But the fact that anyone can
send information to millions of people can also be dangerous, such
as the mass hate messages sent by mobile phones."
Across the continent,
text messaging has become an important and commonly used reporting
tool. Though Internet access via personal computer remains rare,
Africans are robust consumers of electronic information through
their cell phones. Opportunity and risk lie ahead.
Internet penetration
in Africa is less than 4 percent, with broadband access under 1
percent, according to a 2007 BBC report. Nonetheless, advances in
information technology have had an incredible impact on African
media. Over the past decade, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology
report said, the number of cell phone users in Africa has grown
twice as quickly as anywhere else in the world. MIT estimated the
number of users in Africa jumped from 63 million in 2004 to 152
million in 2006. Even in tiny Rwanda, cell phone industry revenue
is expected to reach $1 billion by 2012, said the country's technology
minister, Romain Murenzi. In a continent with a dearth of personal
computers, the cell phone is the way that most people get connected.
"The mobile phone
in Africa represents the opportunity for ordinary people to have
a voice, and it adds a level of transparency to issues that was
simply not available to everyday Africans in the past," said
Erik Hersman, a Kenya-based Web developer and technology blogger.
"The ramifications of this foundational shift are just now
rippling across the continent."
Cell phones have been
used in reporting all over the world for many years, but in Africa
they have particular importance. African journalists use texting
to overcome significant obstacles--including poor or nonexistent
land lines, roads, and computer access that would prevent them from
interviewing people, collecting information, filing stories, or
just passing along notes to colleagues.
But the same technology
that benefits journalists can undermine the profession. Text messaging
can be used easily to threaten and intimidate reporters, as happened
time and again after the Kenyan election. Because technology allows
everyone to spread information easily and quickly, it has opened
the door to unprofessional and unethical practices. The mere dissemination
of information and opinion is not in itself journalism.
In Kenya, after the official presidential results triggered immediate
violence, the government took a traditional step toward clamping
down on news media: It banned live coverage and commentary on broadcast
outlets. The ban created a real-time information void that was filled,
for good and ill, by text messages and blogs.
Citizen journalists such
as Ory Okolloh, a lawyer and blogger, drew from text-message reports
to help create a valuable Web site that mapped violence and peace
efforts across the country. Other bloggers used real-time updates
sent via text message to report violent episodes well before the
traditional media. Within a week, widespread ethnic rioting had
led to the deaths of 600 Kenyans and the displacement of 250,000
others, according to U.N. estimates.
Text messaging and blogging
had a powerful negative effect as well: Many used the technology
to spread unfounded rumors, intolerance, and fear. (And those with
high-end phones could use group functions to send text messages
to a number of people at a time.) Writing for the Berkman Center
for Internet and Society at Harvard University, Joshua Goldstein
and Julianna Rotich observed that "digitally networked technologies,
specifically mobile phones and the Internet, were a catalyst to
both predatory behavior such as ethnic-based mob violence and to
behavior such as citizen journalism and human rights campaigns."
In Africa, nearly every
discussion about the real-time dissemination of information and
opinion is tinged by the memory of the 1994 genocide in Rwanda.
The inflammatory broadcasts of Radio Télévision Libre
des Mille Collines ?helped incite and orchestrate ethnic violence
that led to the killings of up to 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus.
There are major differences between those infamous broadcasts and
the text messages of today, of course, but the specter hangs over
each hate-filled SMS comment.
Though many Kenyans used
text messages and blogs to urge a peaceful resolution during the
post-election crisis, others encouraged violence. "We have
to claim back what rightfully belongs to us. It has come to an eye
for an eye, fist for a fist," one Kenyan blogger wrote, urging
ethnic Kalenjins to fight the Kikuyu, the tribe of President Kibaki.
Journalists, particularly those seen as critics of Kibaki, received
a torrent of text-message threats. Those targeted included senior
editors and reporters from the Standard Group and the Nation Group,
said press advocate David Makali, referring to the country's two
largest media companies.
CPJ has documented dozens
of text-message threats made against journalists across the continent.
Some of the worst cases have been reported in Somalia, a country
torn by years of conflict. "When the phone screen says 'private
number,' I don't answer," said Mustapha Haji, a veteran Mogadishu
journalist and director of Radio Simba. "It means someone is
calling to [say they will] assassinate you."
Despite the risks, many
African news managers say they believe they must embrace cell phone
technology to collect and disseminate news.
In May, the AfricaNews
Web site launched a project in which its staffers use phones enabled
with GPRS (General Packet Radio Service) to send text, image, and
video files. AfricaNews reporters shot video in Zimbabwe's capital,
Harare, just after the presidential election runoff, Editor Olivier
Nyirubugara told CPJ.
"The advantage of
the method is that the journalists don't have to go to cyber- cafés,
which are under surveillance, and they can film without drawing
too much attention," Nyirubugara said. That's an important
advantage in nations such as Zimbabwe. Reporting there was extraordinarily
difficult during two rounds of presidential balloting between March
and June. Zimbabwean police and security officers jailed at least
16 journalists and media support workers, according to CPJ research,
and harassed or obstructed at least 23 other members of the press.
SW Radio, a London-based
station that broadcasts into Zimbabwe via shortwave, found that
the government had begun sporadic blocking of its signal in 2007,
founder Gerry Jackson told CPJ. So SW Radio turned to a new model:
It started sending SMS-based news alerts to nearly 30,000 subscribers
in Zimbabwe. "The text messages definitely helped inform voters
during the election period," said Jackson who, like her staffers,
is an exiled Zimbabwean journalist. "It also kept hope alive
during that terrible post-election time when Mugabe unleashed such
appalling violence ... and we named and shamed when we knew exactly
who was perpetrating violence in particular areas."
Across the continent,
traditional media companies are incorporating cell technology into
their news presentations. Kenya's Nation Media Group has already
launched a cell phone news system. One of Nigeria's leading private
dailies, The Punch, is planning to start a specially formatted news
presentation for mobile phone subscribers, Steve Ayorinde, the editor-in-chief,
told CPJ.
Information is reaching
more people more quickly, that is clear. Journalists are able to
access the once inaccessible and send reports almost instantly.
There are many risks and multiple potential traps, but the net result
may be a richer, more diverse media culture. "Africans have
traditionally relied on the foreign press for their own country's
news," said Charles Luganya, editor of the independent South
Sudan newspaper The Juba Post. Luganya's staffers now use cell phones
and text messaging regularly to relay news from remote locations
that would have defied reporting only three years ago. Looking ahead,
Luganya said, new technology could enable more Africans to get more
news about their home from fellow Africans.
Tom Rhodes, CPJ's Africa
program coordinator, reported on the Zimbabwe election from South
Africa.
Read more from
the 2008 report at
http://cpj.org/attacks/
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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