Cape Times

BRICS Media Forum endorses factual news in pandemic

- EDWARD WEST edward.west@inl.co.za

CO-OPERATION, tackling a swiftly evolving media landscape and the glut of informatio­n, often false, were the main subjects of a virtual BRICS Media Forum meeting this week.

Also discussed were the continued challenges of reactions to Covid-19 globally, and its associated informatio­n overload, Independen­t Media executive chairperso­n Dr Iqbal Survé, who was also co-chair of the 5th presidium meeting of the BRICS Media Forum, said on Tuesday evening.

The BRICS Media Forum was launched in 2015 at the suggestion of China-based Xinhua News Agency and was jointly initiated with the mainstream media from Brazil, Russia, India and South Africa.

Aims of the forum include establishi­ng an efficient working co-ordination and relationsh­ip between BRICS media, advance innovation-driven media developmen­t and gathering

stronger momentum for the developmen­t of BRICS countries through exchange and pragmatic co-operation.

“The relationsh­ip between BRICS media forum countries has become even more important in this period, and all countries should encourage informatio­n sharing, journalist exchange and other forms of resource exchange to enhance the accuracy and efficiency at which informatio­n is communicat­ed to the public,” said Dr Survé.

Remarking on the need for greater co-operation of media in the member countries due to the sheer volume of informatio­n on offer for consumptio­n, Dr Survé said “as media houses, it is our responsibi­lity to ensure informatio­n is accurate and factual, and what better way to ensure that, than share informatio­n and sources across the BRICS countries”.

Also attending the presidium on Monday were José Juan Sanchez, president of Brazil’s CMA Group; Sergey Kochetkov, first deputy editor-in-chief of Rossiya Segodnya, Russia; and their Indian counterpar­t, N Ram, chairperso­n and publisher of the Hindu group, as well as He Ping, president and editor-in-chief of Xinhua News Agency,

China. The media is a powerful force in influencin­g how any particular environmen­t is perceived, understood and experience­d. When there is a “captive” audience, that influencin­g role has even greater responsibi­lity.

During the global lockdowns, the World Economic Forum ( WEF) said 80 to 90 percent of people consumed, on average, 24 hours of news and entertainm­ent a week, which placed an even greater weight on the media to ensure that the truth was conveyed, Dr Survé said.

Since the beginning of the pandemic, however, the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) noted that there had been an excessive spread of misinforma­tion in what it had dubbed as an “infodemic”, he said.

Dr Survé said the integrity of the media had never been more vital.

He had shared in the meeting how in South Africa the informatio­n from the media on Covid-19 had become focused on government measures, statistics, the progressio­n of vaccines and treatment methods, and he also called on the member countries to share advice on mistakes, lessons learnt and how, as a grouping, the BRICS countries could be more collaborat­ive in the media space.

Suggestion­s for ongoing co-operative task forces included having regular conversati­ons via webinar between media houses in the BRICS countries.

“We could have conversati­ons on the experience­s of journalist­s, what campaigns have been effective, how to celebrate front line workers, how do we stop the spread of misinforma­tion and so on,” said Dr Survé.

Such was the scourge of fake news that UN Secretary-General António Guterres remarked at the opening of the annual General Assembly in September that online misinforma­tion was “a toxic virus shaking the democratic underpinni­ngs of many countries”.

Dr Survé said the onus was on the media to keep the public’s trust in the informatio­n it served.

 ?? | IAN LANDSBERG African News Agency (ANA) ?? INDEPENDEN­T Media executive chairperso­n Dr Iqbal Survé.
| IAN LANDSBERG African News Agency (ANA) INDEPENDEN­T Media executive chairperso­n Dr Iqbal Survé.

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