Thank you Ansu for sharing The Daily News. I agree. Precise, to the point, and sublime. Therefore powerful.

Haruna.
 

-----Original Message-----
From: Ansumana Bojang <[log in to unmask]>
To: GAMBIA-L <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Thu, Mar 24, 2011 3:48 pm
Subject: Powerful editorial from Daily News of Gambia


From The Gambia's The Daily News:



Kudos to Fatou Camara for Jammeh-Media forum, but….

  

africa » gambia

 Monday, March 21, 2011

Kudos to Fatou Camara, the newly appointed Director of Press and Public 

Relations at State House for achieving within a week of her appointment what all 

those before her failed to achieve, which is to bring together President Jammeh 

and journalists of the private media under one roof to discuss pertinent issues.

While it may be too early in the day to guess whether the timing of the meeting 

was prompted by current events in North Africa or it was a genuine attempt on 

the part of the regime to dialogue with such an important segment of the 

society, but Fatou still deserves some commendation for no doubt being 

instrumental to bringing it about.

There is certainly an indication of some sincerity on Fatou’s part to realize an 

improvement in relations between the private media and the executive, which had 

continuously seen a downward slide since 1994. 

It is quite apparent that those who had occupied the position before her had 

never mustered the courage that she had to convince President Jammeh of the need 

to meet the journalists.

While President Jammeh, as expected, used the occasion to re-iterate his 

ever-readiness to punish journalists who criticize him, but the very fact that 

he agreed to hold his first such meeting with journalists of the private media 

for more than 15 years, is an apparent indication that he has realized that it 

is not in the interest of his regime to maintain that belligerent attitude and 

continue to see the journalists as tools of the West, always ready to use all 

available means to pull him down.

We can therefore hope and pray that after this meeting, he would henceforth not 

regard the journalists as monsters but just ordinary citizens who, like all 

sincere Gambians, want the best for this country.

It is also quite an achievement to hear President Jammeh acknowledge that the 

press has a positive role to play in national development, which had never been 

acknowledged before by his regime. He and other members of the regime had always 

treated the private press as mere tools of western hegemony bent on 

destabilizing the regime.

While President Jammeh also should be commended for agreeing to the meeting with 

the journalists, it was however disappointing to hear him also use the occasion 

to bash at the media. Everyone expected him to be much more reconciliatory in 

his response to the concerns expressed by the journalists, but instead, he as 

usual seems to have been speaking above the heads of the journalists, using such 

terms as “I will deal with you…”, “when you cross the line…”, “I will never 

compromise national security..”, as well as “I will not listen to any 

Westerner”, giving the impression that the private media is under the control of 

the West instead of being owned and managed by responsible Gambians who are just 

as concerned about the peace and stability of this country as he.

He also repeated his regime’s age-old misconception that Gambian journalists 

write negative articles about the regime only to get visas from western 

embassies. He however failed to realize that all the media chiefs who were at 

that meeting with him had been all over the world and if they had any 

inclination to go into exile, they would never have been at that meeting.

Therefore, it is time that President Jammeh and his regime accepted that Gambian 

journalists are not only guided by the principles of journalism in doing their 

work, but they are also quite responsible to allow anyone outside to control 

them.

One other possible positive outcome of the meeting is President Jammeh’s 

emphasis that his government has no policy in place that prevents public 

officials from speaking to the media. While most of those who spoke on the 

government’s side emphasized the need for journalists to get their facts right, 

but they failed to accept the fact that if the public officials are afraid to 

speak to them about any issue in their domain, then it would be impossible for 

the journalists to get those ‘facts’ that they constantly referred to. 

We can therefore hope that henceforth the public officials will muster the 

courage to talk to the media about issues pertaining to their departments and 

responsibilities without fearing being punished for it. 

While the media chiefs, during their meeting with President Jammeh, had no doubt 

raised quite pertinent issues, especially the inherent problems of access to 

information being encountered by members of the private media, with the 

exception of Daily Observer, but two other issues that needed to have been given 

much emphasis during the discussion, which were alluded to by Sam Sarr, were the 

failure of the regime to give due attention to the investigations into the 

killing of Deyda Hydara and the disappearance of Chief Ebrima Manneh. While no 

one has yet come up with any tangible evidence as to who may have killed Deyda 

Hydara or whether Chief Manneh is being held by government agents, but as 

Gambians, whatever happened to them is the responsibility of the government to 

investigate and come to a logical conclusion, which the government has woefully 

failed to do. 

While Vice President Isatou Njie-Saidy was quick to emphasize that the 

government went to sympathize with the Hydara family after Deyda’s death, but 

the issue of concern to journalists is the regime’s lack of interest in mounting 

a credible investigation into his killing, just as they are expected to do for 

any other Gambian who is killed in such circumstances. One would therefore 

wonder why the regime has chosen to adopt such a posture in the case of Deyda.

President Jammeh was also quoted pointing out the proliferation of media outlets 

since his regime came to power, both print and electronic, which he said goes to 

vindicate his government in terms of press freedom, noting that this was not the 

case before. He then pointed out that if his government does not want the press, 

it would not have allowed the operation of these outlets, given the fact that it 

is the government that issued licences, and hence none of them could have 

operated without a licence.

However, he failed to add that those media houses risk being arbitrarily closed 

down if they write or broadcast programmes that are not palatable to the regime. 

A recent case in point was the closure of Teranga FM for merely reviewing the 

newspapers in the local languages. 

We can also recall that those were similar reasons that led to the closure of 

Citizen FM and Sud FM, as well as the arbitrary closure of The Independent 

newspaper and The Standard without any court order. 

Therefore, while the regime would tolerate as many media houses as possible as 

long as they conform to certain norms acceptable to the authorities, but they 

would not hesitate to close down those that fail to adhere to the strict 

self-censorship regime that has been forced on them. 

As a result for instance, all the private radio stations have been reduced to 

mere entertainment and commercial avenues and none of them now dares to discuss 

political issues or even carry uncensored independent news of their own.

If the regime is indeed sincere in opening the media space and respecting the 

constitutional provisions of allowing divergent views to be aired, then all 

media outlets should be allowed to use all available legal means to inform the 

public rather than being subjected to such unfair restrictions or being 

arbitrarily closed down merely for doing exactly that.

Also, as per Section 108 of the Constitution, “All state owned newspapers, 

journals, radio and television shall afford fair opportunities and facilities 

for the presentation of divergent views and dissenting opinion” which the 

government should respect rather than continuing to use the public media as mere 

propaganda tools of the APRC.  

“If I think that the whole government is APRC, I’m making a great mistake,” 

President Jammeh was quoted saying, but in reality, there is a clear indication 

that there is hardly any distinction between what belongs to the state and what 

belongs to the APRC. A good case in point is the fact that Gambia Radio and 

Television Services (GRTS) behaves more like an APRC propaganda organ than a 

public broadcaster, paid and maintained by the Gambian tax payers.  For 

instance, any event of the APRC, no matter how trivial, is treated as front page 

news while there is hardly ever any positive mention of the opposition as if 

they are non-Gambians who have no stake in the public media. 

Therefore, if President Jammeh and his regime were indeed interested in 

responsible journalism rather than just praise singing, they should have 

insisted on the GRTS serving all Gambians rather than just the APRC and the 

ruling clique. 

As long as such an untenable situation persists, no one would ever be convinced 

of the regime’s adherence to press freedom and the rule of law.



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