Home Blog Page 33

Guaranteeing the Safety of Journalists: West African Experts Share Perspectives   

In times of crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic, the media, and in effect journalists, are a lifeline for citizens. They serve as critical avenues and channels for the provision of needed public health education and information that help people to stay healthy and safe. At the same time, they help hold governments accountable on how they respond to the crises and how they utilise resources meant for tackling the crisis.

Despite their crucial role, journalists have often been the subjects of threats, attacks, arbitrary arrests and detention in some cases even murder. The COVID-19 pandemic has further worsened the plight of journalists. Besides dealing with the trauma of putting themselves at risk of contracting the virus, acts of COVID-19 related violence against journalists across West Africa have been on the rise.

In Nigeria alone, more than 20 journalists have been victims of COVID-19 related abuses in the last 10 weeks. Similar forms of violations have been recorded in nearly all countries in the region albeit at a lesser scale to that of Nigeria.   

To help deal with the serious implications of the COVID-19 pandemic on the media environment in West Africa, the Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) has commenced a series of webinars to seek expert views and proposed solutions to the challenges.

The first in the series of webinars was held on Thursday May 21, 2020, under the topic: “Safety of journalists and COVID-19 in Anglophone West Africa.”

The Speakers at the webinar were Francis Sowa, Chairman of the Media Reform Coordinating Group (MRCG), Sierra Leone; Lanre Arogundale, Executive Director of International Press Centre (IPC), Nigeria; and George Sarpong, Executive Secretary of the National Media Commission (NMC), Ghana. The discussion was moderated by Executive Director of the MFWA, Sulemana Braimah and featured journalists, media academics, activists and union leaders as participants.  

Speaking about the situation in Sierra Leone, Francis Sowa explained that a state of emergency in the country meant to stop the spread of the virus was curtailing freedoms of citizens including journalists who were unable to move freely to gather information He highlighted the launch of a corona response committee by the Sierra Leone Association of Journalists (SLAJ) as one measures that was helping to mitigate the impact of the situation on journalists.

Touching on the relationship between media and security agencies in the context of COVID-19, Sowa said the rapport with the security agencies only existed at the higher level that is at the high command of the security agencies.

“In case of Ghana what we can say for sure is that we have largely experienced a free environment for the practice of journalism,” said George Sarpong of Ghana’s NMC. He however acknowledged a few incidents of attacks on journalists in some parts of the country.

Sarpong added that in an attempt to curb fake news during the pandemic, the security agencies in Ghana had wanted to “rely on a provision in the Electronic Communications Act, to, as it were, seek to arrest and prosecute people who engage in the spread of false information.” He emphasised that in a public health crisis, there is a tendency to overlook human rights in the protection of public health but this should not be comprised on.

On Nigeria, Lanre Arogundale of the IPC, said the press freedom space in the country was already shrinking before the outbreak of the pandemic. He said it appeared security forces took advantage of the lockdown imposed on some cities in the country to abuse journalists.

He noted that violations against journalists came from many directions including  terrorists, officers of security agencies, State Governors, among others.

Arogundade attributes several of the incidents of abuse to, among others, state security authorities acting on the orders of political players. “It’s this political attitude that has informed the conducts of the security agents when they are relating with journalists. That explains why despite the fact that journalists have been recognised as frontline workers they were still being prevented from moving during the curfew just a couple of days ago,” he said.

The big question was what can be done to halt the abuses against journalists in the region? The panel of experts shared the following recommendations:

  • Collaboration: There should be strong collaboration among media support organisations, state agencies and other actors to collectively tackle abuses against journalists. Such collaboration must involve regional and sub-regional bodies such as the AU and ECOWAS. There must be a collective position and voice speaking against abuses against journalists at all times.
  • Analysis and Frameworks: There is a need for a regional analysis of the impact of the pandemic on journalists safety and the overall media environment and coming up with a regional strategic framework for responding to the impact.
  • Strengthening relations between media and security agencies: Efforts must be made to strengthen relations between journalists and security forces in the respective countries to stem the tide of rampant attacks on journalists by security personnel. Such an effort needs to include capacity building for both journalists and security officials in their respective roles to contain the pandemic. 
  • Facilitative regulatory Approach: Media regulatory bodies need to move towards a more facilitative and conciliatory approaches to media regulation, that enables smooth collaboration with the media industry to ensure free, open and sustained democratic media.
  • Capacity building: There should be rigorous capacity building for journalists on how to professionally cover the pandemic while staying safe. Such capacity building should include dealing with fake news and misinformation.
  • Support for media institutions: Governments and other actors should offer safety support to media organisations.

Watch the full webinar below.

 

RTI Road Map Implementation Crucial in COVID-19 Era

The Coalition on the Right to Information, Ghana, is asking government to implement the RTI road map as it has become more important during this era of COVID-19.

This was contained in a press release by the Coalition to mark one year since Ghana’s President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo Addo assented to the Right to Information Act, 2019 (Act 989).

“The Coalition wishes to emphasize that access to timely and adequate information and the need for implementing the RTI roadmap has become more important than ever in these times of COVID-19,” the statement said.

The Coalition says major indicators needed to be in place to ensure the full implementation of the law is still lacking. It is therefore urging government not to neglect its obligations under the RTI Act especially in this pandemic.

Read the full statement here

 

 

Benin: Jail Sentence for Journalist Reduced After Petition

Beninois journalist, Ignace Sossou, who has been sentenced to 18 months in prison for reproducing the words of the country’s prosecutor has had his time reduced to 12 months, with half of the term suspended.

The verdict of the Court of Appeal in Cotonou on May 19, 2020, means the journalist, who has already served five months, will have to spend one more month in detention before gaining his freedom on June 24.

Sossou, who works with the online media, Benin Web TV, was sentenced on December 24, 2019 after he posted on Twitter and Facebook part of a speech made by the country’s public prosecutor, Mario Metonou. The complainant accused the journalist of taking his words out of context.

Since Sossou’s imprisonment, several freedom of expression and media rights groups have made unsuccessful appeals to the Beninois government to intervene to get the journalist released. 

In February, Sossou’s lawyers filed a complaint about his ongoing detention with the United Nations’ working group on arbitrary detention, according to a report by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists. The lawyers also appealed the conviction in the local court. 

On April 28, the day for one of the appeal hearings, the MFWA and seven other press freedom organisations issued a statement calling on the authorities in Benin to release him, especially in view of the risk of being infected with COVID-19 while in prison. A subsequent hearing on May 5, was also adjourned to May 19 when the ruling was made.

On May 3, the MFWA and its national partners sent a petition to the Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Access to Information of the African Commission on Human and Peoples Rights (ACHPR), Lawrence Mute urging him to intervene in the matter to ensure the release of the journalist.

Sossou’s lawyers, Robert Dossou and Brice Hossou, said they were disappointed with the ruling and insisted on the outright release of the journalist.

The MFWA is equally disappointed with the ruling as it appears the authorities are bent on making the journalist serve the jail term for what does not constitute a crime. We had expected that the court of appeal would have acknowledged the wrongful conviction and acquitted the journalist. Having commuted his sentence to 12 months with 6 months suspended sends a chilling message to journalist in Benin that they could potentially be jailed for merely reproducing the words of others, particularly, people in power. The ruling is a bad precedent for future press-related ‘offences’ in the country and a stain on Benin’s freedom of expression landscape.

Journalist Sentenced, Another Detained as Repression over COVID-19 Reporting Rages on

In a rather bizarre incident, a Magistrate Court in Utako, Abuja, on April 28, 2020, sentenced Emma Bricks Oko, publisher of the online magazine brickswrite.com.ng, to three hours’ Community Service and N5000 (about US12) fine for filming police brutality.

Oko was arrested by members of a joint police and civil defense group who spotted him filming their violent enforcement of the COVID-19 lockdown against commercial motor cycle riders in Abuja.

The joint police and civil defence group apprehended Oko and took him to the police station before arraigning him before the court on charges of obstructing the work of the task force.

The arrest and conviction of Oko came a day after operatives of the State Security Service (SSS) arrested Kufre Carter, a journalist. Carter, who works with the local radio station XL 106.9 FM, in Akwa Ibom State was arrested on April 27. This followed the leaking into the media including social media of the journalist’s critical comments about the state Health Commissioner’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. He was charged with defamation and conspiracy.

The journalist was detained for two days at the SSS station in the state capital, Uyo, before being arraigned in Court on defamation charges. After the journalist pleaded not guilty, the judge, Winifred Umohandi, set a bail condition of N3 million plus a letter from his village chief attesting to his identity.

Unable to meet the bail conditions, Carter is still being detained by the SSS. His lawyer, Inibehe Effiong, has complained that officials of the security agency have denied access to the journalist, adding that on May 7, his mother and sister were turned away.

Carter and Bricks’s ordeals follow a growing trend of violations against journalists covering the COVID-19 in West Africa with media professionals in Nigeria bearing the brunt.

On April 2, twelve journalists who were using the internet at the Adamawa State secretariat of the Nigerian Union of Journalists to file their reports as the lockdown had forced all commercial cybercafés to close, were arrested by police officers.  The police accused the journalists of breaking the COVID-19 lockdown.

A week before that, on March 26, Vincent Ake, the General Manager of a public newspapers corporation, was sacked on March 26, after one of the papers under his supervision reported the first case of corona virus infection in Ebonyi State.

On March 28, a security officer manhandled Angela Nkwo-Akpolu of the Leadership newspaper in Imo State and seized her iPad as she was covering an exercise to enforce corona virus control measures. Two other journalists on COVID-19 reporting duty, Michael Ikeogwu and Mathew Omonigo were also assaulted on April 1 by some members of an environment task force in Delta State.

Given the crucial role the media is playing in informing, sensitizing and educating the populace in the ongoing fight against the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic, it is regrettable that state actors, who should otherwise be allies and protectors of the media, have turned against journalists. The MFWA therefore calls on the authorities in Akwa Ibom State in Nigeria to release Kufre Carter and to take steps to end the serial repression of journalists. We further urge the authorities to provide effective protection for journalists covering the pandemic and to punish perpetrators of assault and arbitrary arrests of journalists reporting on the corona virus outbreak in Nigeria.

Call for Quotations – Short- Term Consultancy

Development of Right to Information (RTI) Guide Book / RTI Toolkit

Project Background:

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) is implementing a project aimed at enhancing citizens’ access to information and their participation in local governance in selected districts in Ghana. The project seeks to increase local authorities’ responsiveness to local development concerns/challenges of their constituents.

A major challenge to good governance in Ghana has been the low level of citizens’ access to information and participation in governance processes, particularly at the local level. Information disclosure by local government authorities and access to information by citizens and media practitioners continue to remain low. The consequences have been less public demand for accountability, limited transparency in the utilisation of public resources, and abuse of public resources.

As part of efforts to mitigate the challenges, the government of Ghana passed the Right to Information (RTI) bill into law in March 2019 and the RTI Act came into effect in January 2020. As part of the strategies to effectively implement the RTI Act, the Ministry Information developed a roadmap to commence implementation and to ensure the process is effective. One of the key strategies in the roadmap is the sensitization of the public to understand the Act and how it works.

In an effort to contribute to public access to information and sensitization on the RTI Act, the MFWA seeks to develop a Right to Information (RTI) Guide Book as a toolkit to improving journalists and citizens’ access to information.  The RTI Guide book is expected to cover all key aspects in the Act based on these three (3) sections: How journalists/media practitioners can use the Act, how citizens can use the Act and how information holders can use the Act to disseminate information. The guide book/tool kit must outline potential problems that may arise while seeking information under the Act and provide useful tips for journalists and citizens to mitigate the challenges. The guide book must also give practical examples on how investigative journalists and citizens can access information using the RTI law. It should further be explained in simple and easy to understand language for journalists, citizens and information holders.

The MFWA hereby invites interested and competent consultants to submit applications for the functions specified in the scope of work below:

Purpose of the Call

The MFWA is seeking an experienced individual with the ability to perform the consultancy task stated above for a short-term period.

Objective

  • The call is aimed at developing RTI guide book as a toolkit for journalists, citizens and information holders to increase access to information and subsequently improving citizens participation in governance in Ghana.

Scope of Work

The work will comprehensively analyse Ghana’s RTI Act and other relevant documents on access to information to develop a guide book for journalists and citizens to use to access information.

The key deliverables are as follows and each section should open with key deliverables/outcomes and include at least, one case study/example, and end with exercises, and recommendations for further reading

  • Review Ghana’s RTI Act and other relevant documents on RTI and develop an RTI Guide book/toolkit for journalists, citizens and information holders (describe why information disclosure/the Act is important within the governance and accountability framework, what the RTI can do for journalists/information holders and the public/citizens; provide case studies, emerging practices in the area of RTI) as the introduction
  • The RTI Guide book/toolkit shall highlight key principles, privileges/rights processes, practical steps in using the RTI Act, invoking/redeeming rights, seeking redress/challenging rejections and other relevant information in the Act (such as exemptions, responsibility of public institutions, persons to deal with application, rights of journalists and citizens etc.) needed in accessing information under the RTI law of Ghana.
  • Section 1: How can journalists use the law to access information (Give practical examples, where to go/who to ask for what information, sample RTI request letters for journalists, court cases on RTI issues between journalists and the state/information holders, opportunities available for journalists, tips on how journalists can use the law)
  • Section 2: How can citizens use the law to access information (give practical examples of issues citizens can request for information on, from who and how; sample request letters, case examples of how citizens have been able to secure downward accountability; how uneducated citizens and other marginalized groups can use the law to request for information)
  • Section 3: How can information holders use the law to promote access to information. (opportunities for information holders to practice proactive disclosures, ensure stakeholder inclusiveness and policy by-in, sample referral letters, roles and responsibilities of information holders)
  • The RTI Book must also analyse best practices of RTI implementation in other countries that can be applied in the Ghanaian context to improve accountability and transparency in access to information

The consultant will work under the supervision of the Media Foundation for West Africa who have the responsibility to ensure the RTI Guide Book/toolkit meets the intended project goals and objectives.

Key Requirement from Applicants

  1. Applicant must be a legal practitioner, Policy Analyst or a researcher with an experience in the law field. Having a media background is an added advantage
  2. The consultant must have similar work experiences in the last 5 years
  3. The consultant must demonstrate the ability to comprehensively analyse a legislative document and critically make recommendations
  4. The consultant must demonstrate excellent knowledge of international development and National political structures and principles
  5. Applicant must have a considerable amount of knowledge of Ghana Local Government systems and citizens access to information in the past decade

Submission Requirement

  1. A detailed CV outlining your expertise in the field of interest and your ability to execute the work
  2. At least a sample of similar work that has been executed in the past years
  3. Cover letter addressed to the Executive Director of the Media Foundation for West Africa
  4. Any other document that further demonstrates the candidate is qualified for the work is an added advantage.

Time Frame:

Key Deliverables Due Date Payment Plan
Signing of Terms of Reference (TOR) June 20, 2020 40% of consultancy fees paid
Submission of First draft of RTI Guide Book/toolkit August 20, 2020  
MFWA to review the RTI toolkit and feedback August 20 – August 25, 2020  
Review of RTI Guide book based on Feedback from the MFWA August 25 – September 07, 2020  
Submission of Final Copy of the RTI Guide Book to the MFWA September 07, 2020 Final payment of the consultancy fees after approval of final work

 

Method of Submission of Application and deadline

Applications must be submitted to the MFWA via the official email [email protected] and copy [email protected]  Any other mode of submission will not be recognized as a working document.

Applications should reach the MFWA on or before June 10, 2020. The application letter must be addressed to the Executive Director, Media Foundation for West Africa.

 

 

MFWA, National Partners Petition ACHPR Special Rapporteur to Secure the Release of Beninois Journalist

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) and its 15 National Partner organisations in West Africa have petitioned the Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Access to Information of the African Commission on Human and Peoples Rights (ACHPR), Lawrence Mute, on the imprisonment of Beninois journalist, Ignace Sossou.

Sossou, who works with the online media, Benin Web TV, was sentenced on December 24, 2019 to 18 months in prison on a charge of “harassment by means of electronic communication” and fined CFA Francs 200,000 (about US$ 350) after he posted on Twitter and Facebook, part of a speech made by the country’s public prosecutor, who complained that his words had been taken out of context.

The journalists, has so far served four months of the 18-months sentence and is currently appealing the sentence. On May 3, the MFWA and its national partners sent a petition to Commissioner Mute urging him to intervene in the matter to ensure the release of the journalist.

Commissioner Mute has since acknowledged receipt of the petition.

Kindly click here to read the full petition.

World Press Freedom Day: MFWA Demands Justice for Journalists Assaulted in Connection with COVID-19

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) has called for investigations into acts of brutalities against journalists covering the COVID-19 and other violations against media professionals in relation to their publications on the pandemic in West Africa to ensure that justice is served.

As part of activities to mark World Press Freedom Day on May 4, 2020, the MFWA petitioned the Chief of Defence Staff in Ghana and the political authorities in Nigeria to investigate attacks on journalists covering the pandemic in the two countries and punish the culprits.

The petition to the Chief of Defence Staff of Ghana, Lieutenant General Obed Boamah Akwa was in respect of two separate incidents of brutalities against Yussif Abdul Ganiyu, General Manager of Zuria FM based in Kumasi, Ghana’s second largest city and Samuel Adobah a reporter for TV Africa in Accra by soldiers enforcing the COVID-19 lockdown.

Ganiyu was covering a clean-up exercise on April 2, when the commander of a military patrol team bundled him into their vehicle with registration number 49 GA 68, and assaulted him. The officer also seized Ganiyu’s phone.

In the case of Adobah, he was covering a fire outbreak at a suburb of Accra when a soldier who was part of a COVID-19 enforcement team attacked him. The officer slapped Adobah from behind and pounded him on the ground, while the crowd shouted, “he is a journalist.” the soldier also destroyed the journalist’s phone by stomping on it.

The MFWA urged Lt General Akwa to ensure the violations are investigated and the officers involved sanctioned to serve as a deterrent to others.

The Foundation also on May 3 petitioned the Governor of Delta State in Nigeria Dr. Ifeanyi Arthur Okowa, to bring to book members of the state’s environmental task force who assaulted two journalists, Michael Ikeogwu, the Delta State Chairman of Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) and Mathew Omonigho, the Daily Post’s correspondent in the State.

The two journalists had gone to the Uvwie Local Government Area on April 1, to monitor and report on the state of compliance with the lockdown order issued by the government to curtail the spread  of the coronavirus when they noticed some locals were engaged in a clean-up exercise under the supervision of some members of the environment taskforce.

Ikeogwu said when he approached the leader of the environment task force and asked him why they were forcing residents to carry out the sanitation exercise despite the government’s lock down order, the official, identified as Kingsley Iweka, took offense and ordered his subordinates to attack him and Omonigho.

In another development, the MFWA also petitioned the Management of Le Soleil newspaper in Senegal to reinstate its employee, Fatou Ly Sall, who was sacked after she allegedly refused to seek medical attention for a suspected coronavirus infection at a designated medical centre by the government. Sall said although she had arrived at the office showing symptoms of the infection, she had actually seen her personal doctor and done tests that came out negative, debunking claims that she disobeyed management’s advice to seek medical attention.

We therefore appealed to management to cooperate with the dialogue being facilitated by MFWA’s national partner organisation in Senegal, SYNPICS to resolve the matter.

 

 

Police Abuse Journalists for Covering Arrest of Opposition Presidential Candidate

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) condemns the use of tear gas by Togolese security officers to disperse a group of journalists who were covering the arrest of Togolese politician, Agbeyome Kodjo, on April 21, 2020 in Nukafu, a district in Lomé.

The Foundation also deplores the arrest and subsequent detention of journalist Aristo Tesko, a reporter with Togo Actualités.

Kodjo, Togo’s main opposition leader, was being arrested for declaring himself president despite losing the February 22 elections.

“Gentlemen, you are not invited to the party this morning. Look for another place and clear off the scene,” a  police officer warned the reporters, shortly before another  attacked them with tear gas.

Police fired tear gas despite the media professionals visibly displaying their press badges, vests and working tools.

Tesko and another freelance journalist, Fare-Kpadja Sherifa, who left the scene dragging along their motorbikes were stopped by a furious police officer who felt they were delaying in leaving the scene.

Sherifa was spared for being a woman while Tesko was arrested, forced into a police vehicle and taken to Service central de recherches et d’investigations criminelles (Central Service of Research and Criminal Investigation) headquarters and detained overnight.

Although the MFWA welcomes the release of Tesko, he should not have been arrested and detained in the first place. We, therefore, call on the authorities to investigate the incident and punish the perpetrators of the violation. The tear gas attack on the reporters was also unwarranted as the reporters were doing their legitimate duties. The Togolese authorities must also investigate this incident and take measures to forestall its recurrence in the future.

 

 

MFWA, Seven Others Demand the Release of Jailed Beninois Journalist

Today, investigative journalist, Ignace Sossou, will appear in court to appeal the 18-month jail sentence he is serving for simply repeating the words of  Benin’s Public Prosecutor on social media in December, 2019.

In solidarity with the jailed journalist, the MFWA and seven other press freedom organisations have called on authorities in Benin to release him, especially in view of the risk of being infected with COVID-19 while in prison.

“We at the Media Foundation for West Africa have always maintained that, based on the facts of the matter, Ignace Sossu’s arrest and subsequent imprisonment is unjust. The outbreak of COVID-19 puts the journalist at further risk, given that prison conditions generally do not allow effective observance of WHO’s anti-coronavirus protocols. The global call for solidarity and compassion therefore presents an opportunity for the Beninois authorities to make amends by releasing the journalist from prison as a matter of urgency and moral responsibility,” said Vivian Affoah, MFWA’s Programme Manager for Freedom of Expression.

Sossou, who works with the privately-owned news website, Benin Web TV, was arrested by officers from the Central Office for the Repression of Cybercrime on December 20, 2019 upon complaint by Benin’s Public Prosecutor, Mario Mètonou, that the journalist had taken his words out of context.

“The internet shutdown on (legislative) polling day on April 28 (2019) is an admission of weakness on the part of those in power,” Sossou quoted the Prosecutor to have said at a Forum in Cotonou on December 18, 2019.

On December 24, 2019, a court in Cotonou sentenced him to 18 months in prison and a fine of CFA Francs 200,000 (USD 400) on a charge of “harassment by means of electronic communication.”

In February this year, Sossou’s lawyers filed a complaint about his ongoing detention with the United Nations’ working group on arbitrary detention. 

Earlier this month, over 80 organisations including the MFWA  wrote to 10 African heads of state, including Benin’s president, Patrice Talon, requesting the release of all journalists in detention in relation to their work in order to reduce the risks of exposure to COVID-19 infection.

As Sossou appears in court today, the MFWA and its partners reiterate our appeal to the authorities in Benin to ensure that he is released in the spirit of the global call for compassion during this critical period of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Signed by:

  • African Editors Forum (TAEF)
  • Cellule Norbert Zongo pour le journalisme d’investigation en Afrique de l’Ouest/Norbert Zongo Cell for Investigative Journalism in West Africa (CENOZO)
  • CIVICUS
  • Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)
  • International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ)
  • Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA)
  • Paradigm Initiative (PIN)
  • Reporters sans frontières (RSF)

Beneficiary of MFWA’s Media Sustainability Support Ranks Top Online Media in Benin

Banouto Media, an online platform for news and investigative reporting in Benin, has been adjudged the number one most visited online information site in Benin by New York-based internet giant, SimilarWeb.

SimilarWeb, is a website and mobile application analysis company which updates on monthly basis its data on 80 million websites across 60 countries globally. The websites are ranked using indicators such as number of page visitors, audience and posts effectiveness/engagement. The ranking is conducted both at the country and global level.

For March 2020, Banouto Media, a beneficiary of a Media Sustainability Support from the Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) was ranked the most visited online platform in Benin under the News and Media Category with more than 1.5 million visitors. The media organisation which started three years ago featured for the first time on SimilarWeb ranking in 2018. Prior to the MFWA’s intervention, Banouto Media had an average of 450,000 page visitors per month.

Early this year, the MFWA under its Sustainability Support to media organisations who demonstrate editorial independence, commitment to standards and potential for growth, supported Banouto Media to adopt tools and resources towards improving its online presence and online revenue generation. The MFWA engaged the services of a Digital Media Consultant who assessed Banouto’s online platforms – website and social media; followed by an in-situ training where the Consultant worked with Banouto Media for two weeks on improving brand identity; creating digital videos; setting up a digital savvy newsroom and using social media to effectively engage its audience.

Following the support, Banouto Media adopted digital tools and developed marketing strategies to improve its online presence and revenue generation. It also adopted a social media strategy to improve its audience engagement, introduced a video page on its website as well as a working schedule for the editorial team that takes into account peak times on the Internet so that new content is always available.

In a recent email to the MFWA, the General Manager of Banouto, Leonce Gamaii, expressed gratitude to the MFWA for the sustainability support extended to the media organisation which has contributed to them being adjudged the number one most visited online information site in Benin for the month of March. “…I am happy to inform you that Banouto has been ranked top news and media website in Benin by SimilarWeb…once again, big thank you to the Media Foundation for West Africa for the media sustainability support”.

In a follow-up phone call, Leonce Gamaii said “the new web writing techniques learnt during the in-situ training with the Consultant have improved the way we write our headlines; and the better the headline, the easier it is for our reports to appear on google search. Since then we have seen the number of visitors to our website skyrocket”.

As a media development organisation, the MFWA continues to support media institutions in the region with needed skills to improve their sustainability and professionalism.  “At the MFWA, we know that media sustainability is a major challenge in the region; thus, it is always gratifying to see our contributions make such great impact in the media industry’’ said Adizatu Moro Maiga, Programme Officer, Media and Good Governance Programme, MFWA.

The MFWA’s Media Sustainability Support forms part of activities under its project “Promoting Free, Quality and Independent Media in West Africa Through Capacity Building and Knowledge Sharing” which is being implemented in Ghana, Benin, Senegal, Liberia and Cote d’Ivoire with funding support from the Open Society Initiative for West Africa (OSIWA).

The MFWA has in the past extended the support to Ghana-based Citi FM/Citi TV; and Sierra-Leone-based AYV Media.

 

 

Activist Jailed for Defamation on Facebook Gets Presidential Pardon

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) welcomes the release of Nigerian activist, Ibrahim Wala, who was convicted of defamation for accusing a public official of corruption in a Facebook post.

Wala was released on April 15, 2020, exactly a year after he was sentenced, as part of an amnesty granted by President Muhammadu Buhari to some 2,600 prisoners across Nigeria in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The activist was jailed by Justice Yusuf Halilu of the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory following a defamation complaint filed by the Chairman of the National Hajj Commission of Nigeria, Abdullahi Mukhtar. 

Wala, who is the convener of the anti-corruption group Citizens Action to Take Back Nigeria, (CATBAN) was to spend seven years in prison after he was handed a total of 12 years for defamation, organising an unlawful assembly by convening the anti-corruption organization. and inciting the public against Mukhtar. The court sentenced him to seven years, two years and three years in connection with the respective charges. All three sentences were to run concurrently.

However, the Court of Appeal in Abuja on March 20, 2020, reduced all three jail terms. The longest term of seven years, which was imposed on Wala for unlawful assembly, was reduced to two years. Having already spent one year in prison, the activist had one more year to serve before the presidential pardon.

The MFWA welcomes the release of Wala, whose conviction we had always condemned.  We had argued that the charge of unlawful assembly levelled against the activist in connection with the alleged defamatory Facebook post was rather curious. More intriguingly, he was handed a two-year jail term on the count of defaming Abdullahi Mukhtar, which was the main issue, whereas the count of unlawful assembly relating to the legal status of the organisation the activist leads, attracted a seven-year jail term.

While we salute presidential pardon granted to Wala, we urge judges and prosecutors to handle defamation cases fairly to avoid giving the impression of persecuting freedom of expression. 

 

VACANCY: Fact-Checkers

0

As part of efforts to tackle the spread of fake news and misinformation around the COVID-19 pandemic, the Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) is expanding the scope of its fact-checking project (www.fact-checkghana.com).

In line with this, the MFWA is seeking qualified and experienced journalists and other individuals as fact-checkers for a four-month period (May till August 31, 2020). Fact-checkers will be contracted on stringing basis. Ideal candidates must be familiar with the concept of fake news and misinformation, be familiar with the use of verification tools and strategies, be familiar with different sources of relevant policy, economic and health data, have exceptional analytical and report writing capacity, be able to meet tight reporting deadlines and be able to work under pressure.

Responsibilities:

  • To conduct regular fact-checking on claims, promises and statements about COVID-19 that are eligible for fact-checking and to produce fact-checked reports about such claims and statements using an approved fact-checking instrument on which fact-checkers will be trained.
  • To subject all fact-checked reports to acceptable fact-checking principles outlined during the fact-checking training and in line with principles set out in the fact-checking instrument for the project.
  • To co-operate and support other fact-checkers to jointly fact-check complex or complicated subject matters or claims which may require the effort of more than one fact-checker;

Education: An advanced (Masters) degree or a first degree, diploma (with several years of experience) is required.

Experience: Candidates should have a minimum of three years’ experience in print, online or data journalism; or research, data and policy analysis including report writing; or digital analytics; or other relevant fields. A track record of strong writing skills, analysis and report writing, will be an additional advantage.

How to apply:

Please submit your CV with contact information of at least two references to recruitments[@]mfwa.org using “Application for Fact-CheckGhana” as the subject of your email.  

Deadline: Applications must be received by close of day on Friday April 24, 2020. Only shortlisted applicants will be contacted.