NEWS

Media Authority maintains rejection of foreign journalists

admin | June 28, 2017 | 1:40 pm

The Media Authority says it is maintaining its rejection of 20 foreign
journalists from reporting in South Sudan.

The Managing Director, Elijah Alier, said this month that the body had
denied visas to the journalists because their reporting encourages hate
speech and incite violence.

But this week, the head of the communication unit of the National Dialogue
Committee told foreign diplomats that the Media Authority had given
assurances that any journalist would be allowed to report in South Sudan.

In a statement to Eye Radio, the Managing Director of the Media Authority,
Elijah Alier, said the rejection of the 20 journalists from reporting in
South Sudan remains in place.

Mr. Alier said their rejection was based on the magnitude of the damages
and threats in the contents of their reports.“The Media Authority therefore
hereby asserted that the rejection cases of some of these individual
journalists remain and not lifted,” Mr. Alier said in the statement.

“The Media Authority however has not rejected any foreign media house in
its capacity as an institution to operate in the Republic of South Sudan or
carry out media coverage,” he added.An association of foreign
correspondents had criticized the rejection of the journalists from
reporting in South Sudan, saying the reporters in question were experienced
professionals.

Last week, the Director of the Communication Unit at the National Dialogue
Steering Committee, Alfred Taban, told diplomats in Juba that any
journalist would be allowed to enter South Sudan.Mr. Alfred said he had
discussed the matter with the Mr. Alier.“I asked, I said, ‘why do you not
allow foreign journalists to come to the country’, and he promised me that
this has been suspended,” Mr. Alfred told diplomats during a briefing on
the national dialogue on Wednesday last week.“They are now going to allow
any journalist to come. They were preventing some journalists because they
say some journalists were fond of criticism of what is happening in the
country. They were in other words skeptics. I said, ‘whether skeptics or
not, they must be allowed to come into the country,” he said.

The Media Authority issued the statement asserting the rejection days after
Mr. Alfred spoke to the diplomats about lifting the ban.

U-turn:

In response to the insistence of the Media Authority, Mr. Alfred, who is
also the Chairperson of the Association for Media Development in South
Sudan (AMDISS), said the association does not support journalists who do
their work “unprofessionally”.“AMDISS, of course, is worried if journalists
are not allowed to come into the country. But as I said, the Managing
Director said they have a record of these journalists who are denied and
many of them have written inaccurate articles, biased articles,” Mr. Alfred
told Eye Radio in response to a further inquiries about his previous
statement on the rejection.

“So we don’t really support journalists who do their work unprofessionally
and they want to come to South Sudan to do their work. They must be
professional. They must write accurate articles and so forth,” he said.

The Foreign Correspondents’ Association of East Africa had criticized the
move by the Media Authority to ban about twenty foreign journalists from
reporting in the country.The body, based in Nairobi, has called on the
Government of South Sudan and the Media Authority to stop blocking
international journalists.“Staff members from some of the world’s leading
news organizations, as well as freelancers, are among those affected. The
majority report in the English language,” it said in a statement.

“Over the past six months, the FCAEA has made efforts to engage the senior
leadership of relevant agencies in the Government of South Sudan on the
issue, as well as engage donors, humanitarian organizations and other
stakeholders,” the statement said.

“The Media Authority has not responded to this inquiry,” the statement
added.The Media Authority says no media houses, as institutions, have been
denied coverage of South Sudan.Mr. Alier says the body has accepted 200
international journalists and will continue to allow journalists and media
houses to carry out their coverage in accordance with the media regulations
and as required by law.

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