Everybody who has read Joris
Luyendijk’s great book ‘Het zijn net
mensen’ (translated into English as ‘Hello
Everybody!’) will remember how Luyendijk describes how news is ‘produced’.
Demonstrations with only a few people are filmed in a way that this few people
look like a huge crowd, or people hiding new baby clothes under the ruins of a
bombed house to show to the TV.
He also describes how ‘news’
in a dictatorial regime is very different from news in a European country. I am
not sure how the media here in Cameroon is controlled. I think there is more
freedom than in the countries in the Middle East where Luyendijk writes about.
However, politicians here also have quite some control over the media.
When I lived in Nigeria, we
often knew of Boko Haram attacks through BBC or Dutch news far before something
was published in the Nigerian media.
Here in Cameroon, I am often
also the first one to know about attacks of Boko Haram in Cameroon. However,
the Cameroonian armed forces are also fighting back and having success. They
kill terrorists and recently they freed a German hostage. If something like
that happens, it is big news and we will see reports about it for days.
I think we see the influence
of politics in media here. Of course, if the army kills Boko Haram terrorists,
the government is proud and informs the media. The Dutch would do the same! And
I can also imagine that the government is less ready to publish about attacks
of Boko Haram.
In the Netherlands,
journalists can travel to a place if something is happening, they can look
around, interview people, see what happens. Here is it all more complicated.
First, not every journalist has the means to travel all the way to the Far
North. But also, as a journalist you depend on the politicians. If you publish
a story they don’t like, they might not talk to you again.
That might be similar in
Europe. But a big difference is that politicians here pay journalists to write
about them. Even us as Knowledge for Children, if we have news, we have to pay
journalists to cover it. In the Netherlands, I simply sent a press communique
and most newspapers and radio stations would report based on that or call for
an interview. Here you first pay.
That also means that if I have
a problem with someone, I can pay a journalist to write very bad stories about
him or her. People tell me that this is what really happens during elections.
For normal Cameroonians, this is also bringing problems. Because, how do you
know what is true and what is propaganda? Even for Boko Haram news, we often
depend on foreign information. One of my good friends has a brother in the army
fighting Boko Haram. Sometimes I call my friend with news and he checks with
his brother and it turns out to be true. Sometimes the brother even has to
check it with other soldiers so the Dutch news knows about it before the people
risking their lives for it. Sometimes my
friend gets upset; ‘I have been watching the news on the Cameroonian national
TV just before you called and they didn’t mention it! How come that Dutch media
know before us?’
And regarding Boko Haram, my
impression is that the Cameroonian government is really trying their best to
stop them. The Cameroonian army seems to be more organised than the Nigerian
one. (In Nigeria it also seems that many soldiers collaborate with Boko Haram).
But, the problems are there.
Many people are internally displaced because of it. Many schools along the
border are closed because the army needed the buildings, or even worse, because
Boko Haram took it or attacks schools and kidnaps children. Nigerian refugees
live in camps in Cameroon and can’t go back to their houses.
I hope Cameroon, together with
other countries, will be able to keep Boko Haram out. Cameroon is a safe and
stable country in this region. We are surrounded by so many countries with
problems, Nigeria, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo…
Let’s do it the African way and let’s pray that Cameroon will ‘live long’!
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