Monday 2 March 2015

Journalists should inform and not organize marches

Franklin Sone Bayen
- Franklin Sone Bayen, journalist and researcher
You just participated at the grand march organized by some journalists to show solidarity with the army against Boko Haram. What are your impressions after this manifestation?

I heard the organizers complaining that the ministers, the politicians spoiled the show. You saw that the turn out during the march was not what was expected; it was far below expectation. It is true the organizers had announced the show to start at 8.00am. Probably their 8.00 0.clock was the black man’s 8.00 o’clock. By announcing 8.am they thought that by 9.00am or 9.30am they should have mobilized a mammoth crowd for the march. And that’s true because as we talk now I still see people rushing to the venue. But the presence of ministers and politicians pushed the army to take control of events; they launched the march at a few minutes passed 8 o’clock. You could see the frustration on the faces of the organizers when the army did that. I think some ministers did not feel very comfortable in the mist of the crowds and they asked for the march to be fast tracked. I think the ministers came here to spoil the show. A lot of them came here just for a photo opportunity and not to show support for the soldiers. I saw Minister Gregoire Owona happily doing his piece of political grandstanding. Isa Tchiroma also used the occasion to do one of the things he is known to do best. In short a citizens’ event ended up being a ministers’ show.


You are a journalist and this event was organized by journalists. Some commentators said it is not the role of journalists to organize such demonstrations; that journalists should inform and sensitize citizens, and not go out marching like they did today?
That argument can be defeated slightly because some of the organizers have been to the Far North and were shown pictures of what is happening. They also visited the military installations in the Far North and made guided tours of the areas affected. But I regret to state that no Cameroonian journalist(s) have been at the war front to the best of my information; visiting military installations and affected sites is not the same like being at the battle front and seeing how the war actually unfolds. And that is where the journalists in Cameroon have failed. Journalists are supposed to go to the battle front and relay the true picture of the war to the citizens. You realize that because journalists are not able to reach the war front, reports about the war are replete with propaganda. Some people say we need the propaganda to keep citizens reassured. But I think the citizens would be better reassured if they are given facts and figures and shown pictures of how soldiers are really killing the Boko Harams in their hundreds and thousands as the public is made to believe. That is what the journalist is supposed to do. What a demonstration like this one does to the journalists who organized it is that it commits them in an undue manner. Civil society or citizens on their own should come out and organize manifestations like this. What we as journalists are expected to do here is to go to the battlefield and tell the true story; by so doing the citizens would be mobilized to do what we are doing here today. If journalists take upon themselves to organize this demonstration because they think citizens are not sufficiently informed and mobilized by civil society then the journalists are accepting that they have failed in their duty to inform and sensitize; we have failed to sufficiently inform through writing in newspapers, talking on radios, showing pictures on TV and posting information on-line. I am wont to think that it was in recognition of this failure that some journalists took upon themselves to organize this demonstration today.

Some people said that some of the songs chanted and the slogans on banners were an indication that President Biya was being plebiscited as the man for the Boko Haram situation. What do you think about this?
Ehm, President Paul Biya is the commander-in-chief of the army at this time. He is the one in control, whether you like it or not. But if the demonstration is a call for people to vote for him in the next election I think it is a misplaced call. But if it is to bolster him as the commander-in-chief then I think it is a right thing to do. As journalists we do not have to tune songs calling President Biya’s name like I heard some people chanting “Paul Biya, Paul Biya”. Journalists should not do that in principle; when they do that they compromise their independence and neutrality. But you know some overzealous persons will always take advantage of situations like this to try to win favour from whoever and from where ever. 

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