Journalism: The Most Abused Profession In South Sudan
"In my humble opinion, Journalists must be well versed and take
professional training like doctors, lawyers and engineers."
25 March 2017



Journalism: The Most Abused Profession In South Sudan

By Hon Arop Madut Arop*

The topic journalism, the most abused profession in the Republic of
South Sudan in particular and Africa at large, will be discussed, in
several articles.

The first part will revisit the origin of information gathering skill,
the emergence of the modern press industry, as well as the first
appearance and subsequent development of journalism as a profession.

We will then turn and discuss the need to have a new vision for an
African press, as opposed to capitalist and socialist press. This part
will attempt to answer the question as to whether there is an absolute
Freedom of the Press at all in the world.

The second part will briefly look at the constraints encounter by
journalists in the practice of their profession; hence the importance
for the training of pressmen and women.

The third part of the article will comment briefly about the
introduction and development of the press, for the first time, in
South Sudan, during the regional self-rule experiment (1972-1982) and
the current pathetic situation of the press industry in the world
youngest nation.

The study will further discuss briefly, the importance and the need
for the training of press men and press women in South Sudan, by the
country ministry of information and broadcasting; assuming that the
concerned authorities have learned useful lessons from the past
experiences of the previous regional ministry of information
authorities (1972-1982), when they managed and trained many
journalists from scratch.

Importantly, the training of journalists is pivotal so that they can
do their job of informing the general public accurately and
satisfactorily about what concern them directly or indirectly; in
accordance to the norms and ethics of journalism profession.

The third part will bring us to the conclusion about the central theme
of our topic ‘’journalism the most abused profession in the Republic
of South Sudan’’. In this concluding part, we will give classic
comparative examples about the abused of journalism profession or lack
of it in the world youngest nation. In this context we will compare
the press coverage of the South Sudan current conflict by the Sudan
Tribune and Radio Tamazuj Websites, on the one hand, with that of
Gurtong Peace Trust and Paanluel Wel Websites, on the other hand.

Let us now start discussing part one of the article.

THE ORIGIN OF INFORMATION SKILL AND THE EMERGENCE OF MODERN PRESS INDUSTRY



 Information is, in fact, a word commonly used in our everyday life.
But if you ask someone what information means, he may not give you a
ready answer. The question, which therefore begs for an answer is what
the word information is all about and who uses it?


Fundamentally, the word information can be described as knowledge or
an event that affects majority of the people. It is therefore in this
setting that many researchers have come to believe that, information
gathering skill is one of Mankind first organised social disciplines,
developed as soon as man began to live in societies on this planet. In
this context Information can be said to be as old as Mankind’s history
on this planet.


Through organised information network, man was able to know about what
was going on around his environments. He had to know where he could
find food to eat, shelter to live in, animals to tame and new areas
for protected settlements. Additionally, he had to find tools to
cultivate crops for his survival as well as protecting himself from
attacks by potential foes and wild animals.


Living in such hostile surroundings, Man adopted one of his first
skills, the information gathering. He subsequently invented signs he
used as means of giving warning to the society of approaching dangers.
Drums were also invented and used for socialising as well as alerting
societies of imminent dangers threatening their very life.


Equally important to mention, fire was also lit on the hill tops so
that certain smoke signs could give information to others about
imminent threats.



As time went by, runners were employed to carry messages from one
place to another. That was apparently how the information network and
communications discipline was first conceived and introduced.


The later invention of Letter-Press made the passing of information
much easier than it had earlier been.



The later establishment of modern nation states enabled the rulers,
Kings and Emperors, to communicate with one another by sending and
receiving written messages from their counter parts through
messengers.


The introduction of newspapers, following the invention of printing
press by Johannes Gutenberg in Germany, heralded the birth of
well-organised Information Network, which indeed, was a pivotal
revolution. Leaflets and books were then written, printed and
distributed.


The invention of Printing Press coincided with the dawn of the
industrial revolution in Europe and the introduction of capitalism in
the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Thereafter came, the need for
marketing goods and promoting trade among nations.



The introduction of capital and industrialisation came with the
introduction of the bourgeois Press in Europe and in North America.
The subsequent global scrambling for minerals and natural resources
gave birth to economic, political and information imperialism.


When, business communities in Europe decided to find raw materials
further afield in effort to feed their newly established industries,
there has arisen, a dire need to improve the system of information
network.



Sooner than later, information imperialism was stepped up. Thus
Reuters in UK, Associated Press (AP) and United Press International
(UPI) were targeted at the Anglo-phone countries and Agence Frence
Presse (AFP) for Franco-phone countries. As Europeans began to compete
for profits making businesses, the press undoubtedly became one of
them.


Under the UNESCO sponsored New World Information order, ushered in
following the end of the Second World War, the freedom of the press,
like other forms of freedoms enshrined in the UN Charter, has become
of paramount importance.



Under the UN Charter, all member states in the UN Body strived hard to
avail the opportunity for all citizens, the right to know and be
informed through the media on the activities of both the de facto and
the de jure governments, activities that can affect the people lives
positively or negatively.

It was against this background that modern media industry was
introduced. It became more important after the Second World War when
it became expedient for the UN member states to make laws that
regulate the press as one of human rights in their respective
countries. From then on, changes of political systems and social
structures made it even necessary and urgent to regulate the means of
communicating between the citizens and their rulers.

Among the rights given to citizens under the UN Charter is the freedom
of assembly, freedom of association and the freedom to know what the
rulers were doing for them, collectively refer to as the Bill of
Rights.

Today, it goes without saying that the right for citizens to know what
their rulers are doing for them becomes very urgent.

To satisfy the rights of citizens to know what their rulers are doing
for them, has finally led to the enshrining the freedom of association
and expression in the national and international constitutions.
Essentially, Press became a fourth power in the system of checks and
balance in the Western democracies.





THE APPERANCE AND DEVELOPMENT OF JOURNALISM AS A PROFESSION


Having discussed, the origin of the information gathering skill and
the emergence of press industry, it would be important to shed light
briefly on the development of press industry. It will also be
important at this juncture for aspiring young journalists, to know
what journalism is all about.


Generally speaking, journalism or the gathering and transmitting of
information or news stories to the news consumers started with the
modernisation of technology and trade in the nineteenth century as
discussed. Since then, many newspapers and news agencies sprang up,
the operation of media as an industry led to serious competition among
the media houses. In the end, many tycoons began to buy smaller news
media, adding them to their businesses.


With the subsequent advent of the cold war period, when the world
became divided up into two opposing ideologies, political systems, the
capitalist and the socialist blocs; each trying desperately to do away
with the other, two schools of journalism were born: The Socialist or
the so called guided press, in the eastern bloc countries and the
capitalist or the so called liberal press in the western world.


In Western Europe and North America for example, the press, as an
industry, stood for the capitalist way of development. In the course
of time it also became a victim of exploitation when large media
businesses swallowed smaller ones. Unfortunately, instead of making
the media industry answerable through public control, like the
judiciary, it became a preserve for profit makers only.


Unlike Legislature, Executive and the Judicature, in the system of
checks and balance, the media industry, though given minimal
legislation subsequently, press in the western democracies, was
allowed to function in accordance to the profit-makers whims. With the
advancement of the media industry the bigger news organisations made
the press a power for king-making, thereby giving it the label of
power without responsibility.


Whereas the press in Western Europe and North America became means of
informing the reading public and profit making, the media in the
communist bloc Countries, also became vehicle for political and social
control by the communist party system of rule. There, the press
became, to a larger extent, an important political organ of the ruling
elite, for absolute political control.



According to V.I Lenin, the progenitor of communism as an ideology,
the press must act as an agitator, a propagandist and a mobiliser of
the working people; aimed primarily at one goal, to bring them all on
board without much dissent.


With the press in the socialist countries eventually becoming a
vehicle for total political control, exporting, Marxist-Leninist
ideology to the third world countries, the Liberal Press in the West
also became a business preserve for capitalist marketing competition
and the spread of economic imperialism and cultural invasion around
the world. It specifically targeted the developing countries.


In the later years, when the scrambling for raw materials became
urgent in the capitalist blocs, a number of news agencies as business
groupings were founded. The most important of these news
organisations, as stated earlier, were Julius Reuters Associated
Press, United Press International, which dominated the Anglophone
countries, while Agence France Presse targeted the Francophone
countries.


Precisely, the relation between the news organisations and the news
producers became a ceaseless war that might be brought to a speedy
end, perhaps by way of legislation.





THE NEED FOR A NEW VISION FOR AN AFRICAN PRESS


Having discussed the emergence of the press as tool for profit making
in case of the capitalist bloc and an instrument for exporting
socialist ideology by the Soviet bloc, it will be instructive to look
at what became known as the third world press.


Importantly, the experience in many countries soon after independence
when the governments mismanaged affairs which often led to military
dictatorships made it necessary to think about a need for new vision
of what the press in Africa should be as opposed to the socialist and
capitalist press.


Speaking about the role of the press in the developing countries in
general and Africa in particular former President of Ghana, Dr Kwame
Nkrumah had this to say: While the traditional role of the media is to
inform the reading and the listening and viewing public about the
activities of the political players, its role in the main, should be
that of a political organiser, cultural mobiliser and social educator.



Dr Kwame Nkrumah’s principle, in essence, does evolve around the fact
that the press should broaden its traditional vision to include the
environment in which the people live. It will be important to state
that, the press/media in Africa, according to Dr Kwame Nkrumah, should
not become an industry for profit-making only neither for political
control.


It was in this light that the third world or developing countries the
world over, adopted mix economy as a mid-way mode of development, a
system between socialism and capitalism so to speak. According to Dr
Kwame Nkrumah, media in Africa and in the developing countries should
both be commercial enterprises, para-statal or state owned
corporations.



There is no contradiction, according to Dr Kwame Nkrumah, for the
three types of press/media: commercial, state owned and parastatal
corporations to co-exist, since the purpose of their existence stem
from the same interest, to make a free flow of information to the
people. In other words, according to Dr Kwame Nkrumah the media should
be a peoples' media, looking and catering for the vital interests of
the people needs: socially, politically and above all, culturally.


Looking at Dr Kwame Nkrumah approach, for the press to be free, it
should not be misunderstood to mean that anyone is free to publish
anything that adversely affects others for instance, the state
security and the public morals. The para-statal, in this context
should not control the press either. This precisely means that,
journalists must be well trained before they can be accredited to both
commercial and parastatal media.


If for instance, people who have chosen to become engineers, medical
and judicial cadres are expected to undergo many years of study at the
highest educational institutions before they are accredited to work;
why should it not also be done in the same way for journalists, whose
work affects the system of communicating between the ruled and the
rulers? Why should they be expected to perform their profession
adequately when they only know the ABC of the art of journalism for
reporting news?


In my humble opinion, Journalists must be well versed and take
professional training like doctors, lawyers and engineers.



As for Radio or broadcasting in general, both the commercial and
public institutions have harmoniously co-exist to some extent.



The wire media unfortunately, have totally been given to commercial
profit makers to a large extent as they depend entirely on the sale of
advertisements. These make them publish sensational material
regardless of the impact and effects of what they publish would bring
to bear on the public morals or state security.


As it is educative and informative to look into the past, the article
will quote instances.


In Britain for instance, there are both parastal and commercial Radio
and TV stations functioning smoothly side by side for decades, if not
for centuries. It is useful to recall that, it was only after almost
500 hundred years of press and media industry development that both
the press, BBC Radio and Independent Television stations, and Radios
are currently guided by the policy of minimal legislation.


I support press regulation in Africa, because there are many things at
stake. Societies are still tribally based as they continue to live in
primordial era. Thus, any misuse of the press/media, by journalists
who learn the profession through job training and no ethics of how to
follow the ethics of their profession, may promote ceaseless tribal
conflicts. The case in point is the current social media and press
coverage of the current war in South Sudan.


As was the case in Europe, when minimal legislation was adopted after
many years of press development, minimal legislation for the
commercial media, political party media or the government owned
press/media in Africa in particular and the developing countries in
general, must be guided by press or media laws. African lawmakers must
make laws for the press to be based on ethics, norms and traditional
way of life in Africa.



Importantly, the vital role of the media must be aimed at efforts to
inform the public correctly about what is at stake, namely their
wellbeing and the future development of their country. There should be
a clause in all African constitutions that makes the media, a real
fourth power.


Because, like the other three branches of governance: legislature,
executive and the judicature, which are sponsored and administered by
the state, while they function independently; the press and media in
general and social media in particular in Africa, to a large extent,
must not be left in the hands of profiteers. In concluding this part
of the article; African Media in accordance to Dr Kwame Nkrumah’s
principle must not only be a tool to inform the people about things
their leaders are doing for them; it must, in the main, educate,
mobilise, organise, guard and guide their hard won achievements:
Peace, Stability and Prosperity in their countries (more to follow).


 *Hon Arop Madut Arop is a journalist and author of two books:

 * Sudan’s Painful Road to Peace

* The Genesis of political Consciousness in South Sudan.

He holds:

* Diploma in Socialist journalism - International institute of
journalism (East Berlin)

* Advanced Diploma in Liberal Journalism International Institute of
Media Studies (West Berlin)

* Masters of Arts Degree in International Journalism (City University of London)

* Media consultant

* He can be reached at [email protected]
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