This was due in part to the brief detention of two visiting international journalists and confiscation of their equipment,
as well as ongoing threats to regulate the
media. In a disturbing development, a
Cabinet memorandum had been issued
to direct government advertising and
information primarily to state-owned
media.
The NMT, which had provided assistance to the EFN to redraft the Code of
Ethics and Conduct, commended this
initiative to strengthen regulation and
enhance journalistic professionalism.
While membership of the EFN was voluntarily, the NMT called on all media to
join up and commit themselves to adherence to the Code in order to maintain high standards in Namibian journalism on all platforms.
While to many it is undeniable that the
quality of journalism has deteriorated
over the last few years, this is not unique
to Namibia, rather, it is a global occurrence that can be ascribed to a number
of factors.
In Namibia’s case, it can be argued that
the journalism training institutions do
not provide a sufficient number of graduates to staff newsrooms. When they
do, some media houses unfortunately
do not provide graduates with in-house
training and mentorship by senior journalists. Modern-day journalism is even
more deadline driven and stressful than
that of yesteryear.
Social media has both negatives and
positives. On the one hand it has elevated citizen journalism to a whole new
level, but on the down side, it has heralded the arrival of ‘fake news’ as it is
termed, which have combined to place
undue pressure on mainstream media
to break the news. In doing so, they fail

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to do proper verification of information and at times fail the objectivity test.
Some media houses went as far as to
publish press statements word for word.
In November, life-threatening violence
was sparked at a Katutura home when a
live-caller announced on the Otjiherero
radio station that the occupant had
children’s body parts in his refrigerator.
This unverified information spread fast
on social media, and within two hours
hundreds of people were in front of the
home demanding that the occupant
hand himself over. Riot police dispersed
the crowd with teargas and rubber bullets. Roadblocks and traffic jams added
to the chaos.
These were challenges that have to be
urgently addressed by the media sector.
Stakeholders and citizens must hold the
media accountable at all times, which
is one of the best ways to improve their
professionalism and ethics. Further, the
media and stakeholders must provide
media and information literacy (MIL)
and Digital Literacy. MIL and digital
literacy have become critical skills required in this information age where
fake news is spread across media platforms as truth.

ACCESS TO INFORMATION
Renowned for its high degree of media
freedom and equally lauded for the explicit guarantee of media freedom and
freedom of expression enshrined in
Chapter 3 of the Constitution, Namibia’s
downfall is the absence of a similar constitutional provision of access to information.
It should be mentioned here that in 2016
civil society organisations, under the
umbrella of the Access to Information
(ACTION) Namibia Coalition, worked
with MICT to design an Access to In-

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