Kenya Correspondents Association
(KCA) has concluded a two -day workshop for journalists based in Turkana County
aimed at strengthening their capacity to generate quality and issue-based media
content on Devolved Governments in Kenya.
The workshop, which was held in
Lodwar Town on March 12-13, 2015, brought together more than 30 journalists
from different media outlets based in the county.
A section of the correspondents at the workshop |
The journalists were taken
through intensive training sessions which focused on understanding the Devolved
system of Government, the gains and emerging threats to the implementation of
devolution and a discussion on a recent study on the impact of Devolution on
selected counties done by the Constitution Reform Education Consortium (CRECO).
CRECO Chief Executive Officer who
was among the facilitators, Regina Opondo also shared with the participants the
findings of a recent survey by her organization on the impact of insecurity on
the implementation of Devolution across the country in general and Turkana
County in particular.
She said the surveys revealed
that a majority of rural Kenyans appreciated the gains being made by the
devolved governments on service delivery but were also alive to the challenges
facing the devolved units including emerging cases of corruption.
Trainer, Regina Opondo guiding a session |
The correspondents also discussed
the importance of the media in helping citizens to understand the devolution
implementation process and the necessity for journalists to focus more
attention on issue-based stories that could help the citizens understand the
impact of devolution and hold their leaders more accountable.
KCA Chairman Oloo Janak took the journalists through the
current media environment in Kenya and explained the policy and legal
challenges that continued to negatively impact on press freedom and which if
not addressed, will continue to compromise the capacity of the media and
journalists to report more effectively on devolution among other critical
issues.
Janak explained that KCA ‘s
Project on media and devolution was aimed at building the capacity of
correspondents to generate quality and issue-based media content on devolved
governments.
He urged the journalists to
remain ethical and avoid being captured by the County Governments, adding that
there were worrying trends in some counties where it was becoming difficult for
correspondents to generate in-depth, accurate and well investigated stories.
Media Council of Kenya Deputy
Chief Executive Victor Bwire and a Program Officer in Charge of Media
Monitoring Amos Kibet, made presentations on the finding of a survey the
Council had done on reporting extractive industries in Kenya.
Bwire said the extractive
industry in Kenya was among the emerging issues which presented challenges to
journalists adding that this called for more training to build the capacities
of journalists to report more accurately and ethically.
The Media Council’s presentation
was part of a collaborative initiative with KCA in reaching the journalists in
Turkana County, which is one of the areas that has not been within the
mainstream of media operations and training in the country.
The county is among those that
have suffered marginalization under Kenya’s development planning over the last
50 years. This has inevitably been reflected in the media sector as well.
A road across the Turkwel River In Lodwar: Many years of marginalization |
However, both Janak and Bwire
said there were increasing interventions by the media sector by among others,
KCA and MCK to integrate the county and other previously marginalized areas in
media training and coverage as part of national integration and enhancement of
press freedom and freedom of expression.
The Turkana -based Journalists
also had a session to share their experiences in covering the area, which has
been wracked perennial inter-ethnic conflict based previously on cattle
rustling but which has in recent times been turning into bloody violence over
land, oil and other resources.
The journalists said they faced
harsh terrain, hostility from the warring communities, threats from emerging
vested interests, lack of adequate remuneration, facilitation and support by
the media managers and owners, lack of access to information from government
and Tullow Oil now operating in the area and unreliable communication and
transport infrastructure.
They called for improved working
conditions and guarantees over their safety and security due to the ongoing
conflicts in, among others the Kapedo area where some of them had faced
hostility and assault youths and leaders from the rival communities who accused
the media of bias over the ongoing conflicts.
The Governor's Offices: A modest facility compared to other Counties |
However, the officers who
represented the Turkana County Government at the workshop said efforts were
already being made for sustainable engagement and building better understanding
between both national and local media and journalists.
Impact of Devolution: A tarmacked street in Lodwar Town |
Janak said KCA would work closely
with the county government and the local journalists in building a mutually
beneficial and sustainable engagement framework to ensure a better working
environment for the journalists and enhanced reporting of developments in the
county.
The workshop held in Turkana was
part of a yearlong project being implemented by KCA with support from Ford
Foundation which covers Turkana County and selected counties in Nyanza,
Western, Rift Valley, Nairobi and its environs and the Coast Region.