Listers, I appreciate the points of view on the need to be careful on how citizens receive the live broadcasts - makes sense to manage the situation. I however think that because news travels fast, this is still likely to get to Kenyans in the classical "broken telephone" mode, which means the citizens get distorted/corrupted information that makes the situation even worse. While the media seems to be carefully managed (some here calling it gagged), we need to make sure that the citizens atleast hear from our own media rather than foreigners as this news would still reach the people in distorted form. -----Original Message----- From: Wycliff Ochieng [mailto:cliffexx@gmail.com] Sent: March 7, 2013 1:07 PM To: Edith Adera Cc: KICTAnet - Media Editors Forum; KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions Subject: Re: [kictanet] Is Kenyan Media Asleep? Edith, I think the local media seems to have been gagged to avoid raising political tension. All the media houses had their staff in the field and a in-house tallying centres from nearly all the constituencies but they are somehow afraid to share with the public since IEBC is the only body allowed to release elections results. I think situation, in my opinion raises un-certainty for no reason. Rgd, Cliff On 3/7/13, Edith Adera <eadera@idrc.ca> wrote:
Listers,
With the information revolution, news makes round at the speed of light.
Why should we be getting breaking news of this kind (below) from international news? Why not from our local media? Should our source of information be by international media houses?
The media is represented on this list, what's going on?
Agence France-Presse (@AFP) tweeted at 11:44 AM on Thu, Mar 07, 2013: #BREAKING: Running mate of Kenya PM Odinga - one of the frontrunners in Monday's presidential polls - alleges vote-rigging
BBC Breaking News (@BBCBreaking) tweeted at 0:02 PM on Thu, Mar 07, 2013: Party of 2nd-placed candidate in Kenyan elections, Raila Odinga, says it has evidence that results are being "doctored"