Listers, CA notice was a brazen attack on freedom of expression, press freedom, and access to information. Articles 33, 34, and 35, of our Constitution. No sugarcoating or mollycoddling can change that. CA like many other government bodies, seems to be testing to see how far they can push. Regards, JG On Sat, 25 Mar 2023, 12:13 simiyu mse via KICTANet, < kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> wrote:
The challenge is the authorities increasingly using laws, rules and regulations to systematically coddle the populace. Attempting to control the narrative believing that people do not have the faculties to discern truth and it's impact. In such a case, those believing in sharing the truth become detractors to the goal.
This has far reaching effects. We are seeing generations increasingly becoming fragile because they cannot handle things beyond their ken. This stems from being shielded to the point of detriment to personal development. The limits being based on the nurturer's (government's ?) own interpretations, goals and ambitions as to the preferred outcome of those under their custody.
Overparenting.
This concept of 'my truth' being an individual interpretation of the silos created by regulation and narratives that reach the individual based on their individual leaning.
In such a world, the truth becomes 'violence'. I believe you can see this in many spheres now.
Eventually, attempts at control usually backfire spectacularly. Mankind is peculiar like that.
./ken
On Fri, 24 Mar 2023, 22:31 Sidney Ochieng via KICTANet, < kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> wrote:
Update: High Court Rules in Favour of Media Freedom Following Warning by Ezra Chiloba https://techweez.com/2023/03/24/high-court-rules-in-favour-of-media-freedom/ Well done to the courts
On Fri, 24 Mar 2023 at 06:35, Ali Hussein <ali@hussein.me.ke> wrote:
I'm also keen to understand this 'nuance', my brother, @Wainaina Mungai <wainaina.mungai@gmail.com>. Please enlighten us.
Regards
*Ali Hussein*
Fintech | Digital Transformation
Tel: +254 713 601113
Twitter: @AliHKassim
LinkedIn: Ali's Profile <http://ke.linkedin.com/in/alihkassim> <http://ke.linkedin.com/in/alihkassim>
Any information of a personal nature expressed in this email are purely mine and do not necessarily reflect the official positions of the organizations that I work with.
On Thu, Mar 23, 2023 at 1:03 PM Sidney Ochieng via KICTANet < kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> wrote:
Please explain this nuance to me.
On Thu, 23 Mar 2023 at 12:48, Wainaina Mungai < wainaina.mungai@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Sidney,
In a nuanced way, CA is actually helping to protect journalists from media owners. Many of the staff in privately owned broadcast stations appreciate the oversight - and caution to the media owners.
Regards, Wainaina
On Thursday, March 23, 2023, Sidney Ochieng via KICTANet < kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> wrote:
Hi all, The CA yesterday issued a warning to several media houses over their coverage of the demonstrations on Monday. It's not posted to their website yet as far as I can tell but it has been posted to their office twitter handle here <https://twitter.com/CA_Kenya/status/1638597216595050515>: https://twitter.com/CA_Kenya/status/1638597216595050515
I'd like to take sometime to explain why I think their statement is wrong: *ALL BROADCASTERS RE: BROADCAST COVERAGE OF DEMONSTRATIONS* So the CA understands these are demonstrations. That's good
*Today, the Authority completed a review of Broadcast Coverage of Opposition demonstrations held on 20th March 2023. The Authority has established that at least Six (6) TV stations, namely, Citizen TV, NTV, K24, KBC, TV47 and Ebru TV, provided coverage in a manner that violated the Programming Code. The coverage depicted scenes that could cause panic or incitement to the public, threating peace and cohesion in the country. The Authority has, in accordance with the relevant provisions of the law, issued notices to the identified broadcasters to take immediate remedial actions.*
*1. Section 33 of the Constitution of Kenya as read together with Section 5B of the Kenya Information and Communication Act, which provide that the constitutionally guaranteed right to Freedom of Expression, does not extend to propaganda for war, incitement to violence, hate speech or advocacy of hatred that constitutes ethnic incitement, vilification of others, or incitement to cause harm or discrimination;*
The protests and the actions leading to them have been well covered. The initiator of these protests was the opposition and they made it clear why they were being called was a perceived disputed election, what they saw as poor leadership, and raising cost of living. It is their right as enshrined in the constitution, projected by freedom of speech and by the freedom to demo, picket and present petitions to public bodies. Meanwhile those of us who followed the protests on the various media mentioned by the CA were treated to scenes of people protesting the rising cost of living especially the cost of food. Nowhere was *propaganda for war, incitement to violence, hate speech or advocacy of hatred that constitutes ethnic incitement, vilification of others, or incitement to cause harm or discrimination *
*2. Clauses 461 (1) (a) Kenya Information and Communications Act which requires licensed broadcasters to provide responsible and responsive programming that caters for the varied needs and susceptibilities of different sections of the Kenyan community;* Planned and executed nationwide protests I would think is coverage that whole country would be interested in.
*3. Clauses 19 (1) (c) and (d) Kenya Information and Communications (Broadcasting) Regulations which requires a licensee to ensure that no broadcasts by its station "glorifies violence or depicts violence in an offensive manner; or is likely to incite, perpetuate hatred, vilify any person or section of the community;* If we were to go by the broadcasts I saw, and of course this could have been biased, the only glorification of violence and depict of it in an offensive manner was done by our police forces. The only report of a death across the entire country on Monday came at the hands of the police in Maseno. In fact it could be said, and has by some media houses, the escalation of violence was by the police.
*4. Clause 10.2.1 of the Programming Code which requires broadcasters to take care in coverage of crisis situations so as not to hinder or obstruct efforts by authorities to resolve the situation;* I don't have much to say on this other than can the CA please provide evidence where a boradcastor blocked the police and any other emergency service trying to do their jobs? Or is the implication of this that they can't do their jobs while being recorded or somehow their work is secret and covert?
*5. Section 5.8.4 of the Programming Code which states that presentation of news and commentaries must not be done in a way that would create unnecessary panic or alarm;* I'd like specific examples of this.
*6. Section 5.8.3 of the Programming Code which states that morbid, violent, sensational or alarming details that are not essential to factual reporting are not permissible* Again. I'd like specific examples of this.
*7. Clause 2.4 of the Programming Code which states that broadcasters are responsible for the broadcast materials relayed on their stations, regardless of their source, as well as professional activities of its employees.* This is the only thing in the entire statement I have no issues with. It is reasonable.
I very strongly disagree with almost everything in this statement. I understand that some of these laws and policies were put into place after what we went through as a country in 2007/08 but them being used like this is a worrying assault of our freedoms, particularly those of expression.
I will be writing to the CA directly and hope that they can bring forth compelling evidence to back otherwise this is a worrying politicisation of an agency that has for the most part done it job and stayed neutral/
-- Warmly, Sidney
*Twitter:* @princelySid <https://twitter.com/princelySid>* |* *Github:* princelySid <https://github.com/princelySid> | *Web: * sidneyochieng.co.ke
-- Warmly, Sidney
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-- Warmly, Sidney
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KICTANet is a multi-stakeholder Think Tank for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. KICTANet is a catalyst for reform in the Information and Communication Technology sector. Its work is guided by four pillars of Policy Advocacy, Capacity Building, Research, and Stakeholder Engagement.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
KICTANet - The Power of Communities, is Kenya's premier ICT policy engagement platform.
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KICTANet is a multi-stakeholder Think Tank for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and regulation. KICTANet is a catalyst for reform in the Information and Communication Technology sector. Its work is guided by four pillars of Policy Advocacy, Capacity Building, Research, and Stakeholder Engagement.
KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
KICTANet - The Power of Communities, is Kenya's premier ICT policy engagement platform.