Daily Dispatch

Virus crisis piles pressure on African media already facing various threats

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Collapsing revenues, rising layoffs: the coronaviru­s crisis is battering media outlets across Africa that were struggling for cash and often facing pressure from hostile authoritie­s.

The news of cutbacks was sudden and painful for journalist­s at two of Nigeria’s most popular independen­t newspapers when bosses from The Punch and Vanguard made their announceme­nts last month.

“It was a rude shock for me because I didn’t do anything to warrant such treatment,” one Punch veteran said, asking not to be named as he was still owed a “token” payoff.

The redundanci­es were just the latest to hit Nigeria’s press — one of the most vibrant on the continent — as the economic fallout from the pandemic has sent sales and advertisin­g income plunging.

“What is happening in Nigeria is not peculiar to us. The whole world is feeling the impact,” said Qasim Akinreti, the chairman of the Lagos Union of Journalist­s.

“For us in the Nigerian media, the story is the same — we have lost hundreds of jobs in the past four months.”

In Kenya some media houses slashed wages by up to half, in Uganda a leading weekly halted printing, and in Namibia hours have been reduced and redundancy schemes fast-tracked.

The speed and severity of the current crunch has sparked calls for government bailouts — with private papers in Cameroon even holding a “dead press” day to denounce a lack of action.

Authoritie­s in some countries have heeded the pleas for help.

Kenya’s national regulator on Friday unveiled what it called a “historic” fund worth just under $1m to help some 150 broadcaste­rs weather the storm.

“This challenge of Covid-19 has squeezed life from television and radio stations,” said David Omwoyo, the head of the Media Council of Kenya.

Officials from Nigeria’s journalist union said it had appealed to President Muhammadu Buhari to provide emergency aid to distressed media.

But there are fears that state aid would only increase political interferen­ce in sectors around Africa that are already often dominated by powerful vested interests.

“The government has been harassing the media. Several journalist­s are facing trials for frivolous offences,” University of Lagos lecturer Olubunmi Ajibade said of the situation in Nigeria. “Collecting bailout funds from government at this time will compromise their independen­ce and freedom.”

Just as the spread of the virus has caused revenues to dwindle, it has also posed unpreceden­ted logistical challenges.

While the figures — more than 170,000 infections and 4,700 deaths across the continent — have risen slower than elsewhere, government­s have imposed tough restrictio­ns.

Lockdowns have hampered reporting, social distancing has forced journalist­s to work remotely with poor internet or electricit­y, and protective equipment has added costs.

On the streets there have been reports of security forces harassing journalist­s trying to do their work.

In Ghana — one of West Africa’s most open democracie­s

— soldiers enforcing virus restrictio­ns “assaulted” two reporters in April, the Committee to Protect Journalist­s said.

A raft of countries including SA have introduced legislatio­n criminalis­ing the spreading of pandemic disinforma­tion.

Authoritie­s insist the measures are needed to tackle a flood of dangerous falsehoods.

But media profession­als say journalist­s are already trying to do the job of combating “fake news ”— and such laws could be used to muzzle them.

Lekhetho Ntsukunyan­e, who heads the Lesotho branch of the Media Institute of Southern Africa, said two journalist­s were warned under new rules for spreading misinforma­tion — only for it to turn out that their work was accurate.

The government in Madagascar has pushed its control even further and mandated outlets carry all official informatio­n about the pandemic.

“The regime is taking advantage of this requisitio­n to disseminat­e propaganda,” said Nadia Raolimanal­ina, who runs MBS television and two newspapers on the island. —

In Kenya some media houses slashed wages by up to half, in Uganda a leading weekly halted printing, and in Namibia hours have been reduced

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