Sowetan

Girls march for African culture

Protest is against “censorship” by media giants

- By Bafana Nzimande

About 200 girls and young women marched through the streets of Johannesbu­rg yesterday to demand that Google and Facebook respect African culture.

Organised by local media company TV Yabantu‚ the march was to pressure social media platforms to stop censoring African cultural content. Lazi Dlamini said the companies were insulting African culture and women as they continue to remove cultural videos and images that feature bare-breasted women on their platforms.

“African cultural content has been classified as inappropri­ate and has been removed by both companies for no valid reason. This is an insult to us because there is nothing sexual about our culture. These are Africans celebratin­g their culture. Google and Facebook must respect us because they are operating in an African land‚” said Dlamini.

The march started at the Pieter Roos Park in Parktown‚ with marchers crossing the Mandela Bridge and ending their protest at Beyers Naude Square in the city centre.

Marche rs‚ clad in their traditiona­l outfits‚ sang and danced through the streets‚ with some carrying placards with different messages for Google and Facebook.

Some of the placards read “Google a racist”‚ “Facebook stop deleting our pictures” and “Cultural terrorism”.

The crowd was addressed by Francis Nwaneri‚ who calls himself the “paramount chief of Africa.” He called on internatio­nal media companies to respect Africa.

“Western celebritie­s are always displaying their bodies and nobody censors them. When it’s Western images we are told it’s sexy‚ but when it’s African cultural images it’s nudity. That thing has to stop. Google and Facebook must stay away from our cultural practices‚” said Nwaneri.

TV Yabantu said it’s planning to meet with the department of communicat­ions over this matter. Dlamini said they had tried to communicat­e with both companies several times but they have refused to meet with them. He said TV Yabantu would continue to pressure internatio­nal companies to stop policing African culture.

‘ ‘ Facebook and Google must respect us as they are in African land

 ?? / MDUDUZI NDZINGI ?? Young girls gathered in Johannesbu­rg to march against Google and Facebook for restrictin­g African content as inappropri­ate.
/ MDUDUZI NDZINGI Young girls gathered in Johannesbu­rg to march against Google and Facebook for restrictin­g African content as inappropri­ate.

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