media freedom in southern Africa for activists,
students, journalists, academics, policy makers
and members of the public around the world.

The African Media Barometer

The African Media Barometer (AMB) is an in-depth
and comprehensive description and measurement
system for national media environments on the
African continent. Unlike other press surveys or
media indices, the AMB is a self-assessment
exercise based on home-grown criteria derived
from African Protocols and Declarations like the
Declaration of Principles on Freedom of Expression
in Africa (2002) by the ACHPR.
The instrument was jointly developed by fesmedia
Africa, the Media Project of the Friedrich-EbertStiftung (FES) in Africa, and MISA in 2004 and is an
analytical exercise to measure the media situation
in a given country, which also serves as a practical
lobbying tool for media reform.

In 2013, MISA and FES partnered to conduct
AMBs in Zambia and South Africa. The results of
each study were presented to their publics to push
for an improvement of the media situation using
the African Union Declaration and other African
standards as benchmarks. MISA and its Chapter
offices and representatives in Zambia and South
Africa are integrating the recommendations of
these studies into our advocacy efforts.

Freedom of expression in
cyberspace: assessing the
relationship between human
rights, privacy laws and
regulations
In 2013, MISA partnered with Privacy International
– a UK-based organisation dealing with privacy
and surveillance issues – to conduct a survey on
freedom of expression in cyberspace to explore
how aware journalists and bloggers are of the risks
and threats they face when using digital and mobile
technology.

Some of the key findings from the survey completed
by 90 journalists and bloggers across southern
Africa were:
•

Nearly 60% of respondents said they are
aware of privacy laws and regulations in their
countries.

•

Almost 60% of respondents suspect their
communication devices have come under
threat from spyware or malware, and most
believe their government was the perpetrator.

•

At least 10% of the respondents were attacked
for their cyber work, mainly in the form of
insulting emails and comments via social media
such as Facebook and Twitter. Some of those
respondents said it was government ministers
in their respective countries who threatened
them.

•

43% of the respondents were not aware of the
privacy laws in their country.

Access to information –
examining progress in Africa
MISA, in collaboration with its African regional
partners, published a booklet ‘Access to Information
– examining progress in Africa’, providing a basic
assessment on the state of access to information
in 14 countries on the continent, using the
African Platform on Access to Information (APAI)
Declaration as its benchmark.
MISA is encouraged by what seems to be a
growing recognition on the continent for citizens
to claim their right to information, supported by
the crafting of a model Access to Information
(ATI) Law by the African Commission on Human
and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR). A good number of
countries have adopted the model and have gone
on to design their own law, which is either before
their respective Parliaments as a Bill or has been
signed and become law.

The study formed part of an ongoing project, through
which MISA aims to help media workers protect
themselves online. This includes contributing to
the development of the draft African Declaration
for Internet Rights and Freedoms, to address the
now critical questions being asked about how the
Internet environment can be cultivated to best meet
Africa’s social and economic development needs
and goals.

Criminal defamation and insult
laws in southern Africa
In 2013, MISA finalised its research papers on the
application of criminal defamation and insult laws
in Malawi and Zambia. Both papers form part of
an overall regional review, which will extensively
examine the use of laws that criminalise free speech
and will be used to inform national campaigns in
both countries.
MISA launched these research papers in Malawi
and Zambia respectively on 28 September 2013,
the International Right to Know Day.

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