As a journalist, it is very easy to be swallowed into the bandwagon
calling for actions to amend the Kenya Communications Act, which the
media hoped it would not be signed.
But most of us shouting from
the top of our heads do not even know much about the history of the
process. It has been a long process since 1998 when the Kenya
Communications Act came into force. The ICT policy was published in
2006 and since then the amendment
We do not even know that the
media owners did not consider it as priority then, to send high level
officials from the media houses to the multi-stakeholder forums.
I recall at one time we were laughing that the only media official, apart from those who were covering the event, was from DSTv.
Of
course my stint at the Kenya ICT Action Network allowed me to engage
with the ICT industry in regard to the ICT policy and the subsequent
law.
What would have happened, if Linus Gitahi, Nation Media
Group CEO and other media heavy weights were there from the first day
of the multi-stakeholder deliberations? What if all those concerns were
tackled at another level, maybe the wording would be different.
Since
December, the media owners have met more times than they have probably
met in the last three years. Too bad the result did not go their way.
This
should be a lesson to the media owners, to be more engaged not only in
covering the functions but in the deliberations. Yes, the process can
be tough and involving, and to some extent full of gibberish but it
saves a lot of last minute troubles.
In my opinion, this was a
fight more for the media owners than ordinary journalists. The open
sides that radio stations took during last elections was more of an
issue of editorial policy than individual journalists. I mean the
policy that the owners come out and say we support certain parties, not
the story done because the journalist received a handout. The debate
has been going on for sometime.
For us journalists, we can not
even champion our own cause. How do you walk out to protest against a
bill that affects telecommunications equipment when you can't protest
against rubbish wages and crappy working environments.
What
would happen if we wanted to protest against a media house that fires
60 journalists without notice, you go to work one day and you find a
letter and a cheque and instructions to the security team that they
should not let you in. Just because the media house has enough money to
pay off three months salary, there is nothing you can do.
If the journalists wanted to take to the streets, would the media houses even cover the event?
That
is why Gitahi and his team needed to take to the streets and protest if
they felt aggrieved. It is true that if the equipment is confiscated,
then journalists will be out of a job media houses don't need such
drastic measures to kick journalists out.
I see this as a battle
for the media owners because if they perceived it as important, they
would have allocated a team from all the media houses to deal with the
issues.
It is also easy to be led to believe that these rules do
not exist elsewhere, I was reading the Tanzanian Act and it is far more
stringent than what we are complaining about.
UK, Australia and
majority of the EU have these rules, and that is why you see there is
no much of convincing cries from the international community. This is
because there is need for some level of regulation.
This article was first published on Rebecca Wanjiku's blog .
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