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The Media Council of Kenya is an independent national institution established by the Media Act, 2007 as the leading institution in the regulation of media and in the conduct and discipline of journalists.

Council membership is drawn from media stakeholders including the Media Owners Association, Kenya Union of Journalists, Kenya Correspondents Association, Kenya Editors Guild, Public Relations Society of Kenya, Kenya News Agency, Private and Public Universities, the Kenya Institute of Mass Communication and the Law Society of Kenya.

 

Vision

A society where media freedom is respected,upheld,protected and maintained and where journalists and media practitioners are professional and responsible.

 

Mission

To promote media freedom and professionalism as well as arbitrate media disputes and educate the public and journalists about the media and its role in society. To ensure effective implementation of the above, the Council will keep a register of all journalists and media enterprises operating in Kenya.

The year 2008 started with a bang and ended with yet another in the year 2008. Following the 2007 post election violence, the government slapped a ban on live broadcasts on the eve of 2008 saying this was necessary to preserve national security at the time.
This came as a surprise to the media fraternity. Media organizations petitioned the government to lift the ban. The government also came under heavy criticism from the civil society and Non-Governmental Organizations for reversing the gains recorded over the years brought about by the widening of democratic space and the associated freedom of speech. Despite the protests the government stood its ground. It accused the media for fuelling the violence by spreading hate speech messages. Central to these accusations were the vernacular FM stations and community radio stations which were said to preach tribal hatred.
The ban was later lifted. At the close of the year, Hon Mwai Kibaki, the President of Kenya, signed into law the Kenya Communications Bill. The bill covers ICT, media and postal services. The media reacted angrily to sections of that they felt bordered on repression of the media. Talks to sort out the issue were initiated. By the end of the year, the Act was in force and the talks were still going on. This publication is a brief account of Kenya media in 2008 and is in fulfilment of Article 4(l) of the Media Act 2007 which states: “[the Media council will] conduct an annual review of the performance and the general opinion of the media.”

Media in Kenya Stats

1. Accuracy and Fairness

(a) The fundamental objective of a journalist is to write a fair, accurate and an unbiased story on matters of public interest. All sides of the story shall be reported, wherever possible.

Comments should be obtained from anyone who is mentioned in an unfavourable context.

(b) Whenever it is recognized that an inaccurate, misleading or distorted story has been published or broadcast, it should be corrected promptly. Corrections should present the correct information and should not restate the error except when clarity demands.

(c) An apology shall be published or broadcast whenever appropriate in such manner as the Council may specify.

(d) When stories fall short on accuracy and fairness, they should not be published. Journalists, while free to be partisan, should distinguish clearly in their reports between comment, conjecture and fact.

2. Independence

Journalists should defend the independence of all journalists from those seeking influence or control over news content.

They should—

(a) gather and report news without fear or favour, and vigorously resist undue influence from any outside forces, including advertisers, sources, story, subjects, powerful individuals and special interest groups

(b) resist those who would buy or politically influence news content or who would seek to intimidate those who gather and disseminate news.

(c) determine news content solely through editorial judgement and not the result of outside influence.

3. Integrity

Journalists should present news with integrity and decency, avoiding real or perceived conflicts of interest, and respect the dignity and intelligence of the audience as well as the subjects of news.

They should—

(a) identify sources whenever possible. Confidential sources should be used only when it is clearly in public interest to gather or convey important information or when a person providing information might be harmed;

(b) clearly label opinion and commentary;

(c) use technological tools with skill and thoughtfulness, avoiding techniques that skew facts, distort reality, or sensationalize events;

(d) use surreptitious news gathering techniques including hidden cameras or microphones, only if there is no other way of obtaining stories of significant public importance, and if the technique is explained to the audience.

4. Accountability

Journalists and all media practitioners should recognize that they are accountable for their actions to the public, the profession and themselves.

They should—

(a) actively encourage adherence to these standards by all journalists and media practitioners;

(b) respond to public concerns, investigate complaints and correct errors promptly;

(c) recognise that they are duty-bound to conduct themselves ethically.

5. Opportunity to Reply

A fair opportunity to reply to inaccuracies should be given to individuals or organizations when reasonably called for.

If the request to correct inaccuracies in a story is in the form of a letter, the editor has the discretion to publish it in full or in its abridged and edited version, particularly when it is too long, but the remainder should be an effective reply to the allegations.

6. Unnamed Sources

Unnamed sources should not be used unless the pursuit of the truth will best be served by not naming the source who should be known by the editor and reporter.

When material is used in a report from sources other than the reporter's, these sources should be indicated in the story.

7. Confidentiality

In general, journalists have a professional obligation to protect confidential sources of information.

8. Misrepresentation

Journalists should generally identify themselves and not obtain or seek to obtain information or pictures through misrepresentation or subterfuge.

Subterfuge can be justified only in the public interest and only when material cannot be obtained by any other means.

9. Obscenity, Taste and Tone in Reporting

(a) In general, journalists should avoid publishing obscene, vulgar or offensive material unless such material contains a news value which is necessary in the public interest.

 

(b) In the same vein, publication of photographs showing mutilated bodies, bloody incidents and abhorrent scenes should be avoided unless the publication or broadcast of such photographs will serve the public interest.

10. Paying for News and Articles

When money is paid for information, serious questions can be raised about the credibility of that information and the motives of the buyer and the seller. Therefore, in principle, journalists should not receive any money as an incentive to publish any information.

11. Covering Ethnic, Religious and Sectarian Conflict

(a) News, views or comments on ethnic, religious or sectarian dispute should be published or broadcast after proper verification of facts and presented with due caution and restraint in a manner which is conducive to the creation of an atmosphere congenial to national harmony, amity and peace.

(b) Provocative and alarming headlines should be avoided.

(c) News reports or commentaries should not be written or broadcast in a manner likely to inflame the passions, aggravate the tension or accentuate the strained relations between the communities concerned. Equally so, articles or broadcasts with the potential to exacerbate communal trouble should be avoided

13. Privacy

(a) The public's right to know should be weighed against the privacy rights of people in the news.

(b) Journalists should stick to the issues.

(c) Intrusion and inquiries into an individual's private life without the person's consent are not generally acceptable unless public interest is involved. Public interest should itself be legitimate and not merely prurient or morbid curiosity. Things concerning private affairs are covered by the concept of privacy except where these impinge upon the public.

14. Intrusion into Grief and Shock

(a) In cases involving personal grief or shock, inquiries should be made with sensitivity and discretion.

(b) In hospitals, journalists should identify themselves and obtain permission from a responsible executive before entering non-public areas of hospitals or similar institutions to pursue enquiries.

12. Recording Interview's and Telephone Conversations

(a) Except in justifiable cases, journalists should not tape or record anyone without the person's knowledge. An exception may be made only if the recording is necessary to protect the journalist in a legal action or for some other compelling reason.

In this context these standards also apply to electronic media.

(b) Before recording a telephone conversation for broadcast, or broadcasting a telephone conversation live, a station should inform any party to the call of its intention to broadcast the conversation. This, however, does not apply to conversation whose broadcast can reasonably be presumed, for example, telephone calls to programmes where the station customarily broadcasts calls.

15. Sex Discrimination

Women and men should be treated equally as news subjects and news sources.

16. Financial Journalism

(a) Journalists should not use financial information they receive in advance for their own benefit, and should not pass the information to others.

(b) Journalists should not write or broadcast about shares, securities and other market instruments in whose performance they know they or their close families have a significant financial interest, without disclosing the interest to the editor.

(c) Journalists should not buy or sell, directly or through nominees or agents, shares or securities and other market

17. Letters to the Editor

An editor who decides to open a column on a controversial subject is not obliged to publish all the letters received in regard to that subject.

The editor may select and publish only some of them either in their entirety or the gist thereof. However, in exercising this right, the editor should make an honest attempt to ensure that what is published is not one-sided but presents a fair balance between the pros and the cons of the principal issue. The editor shall have the discretion to decide at which point to end the debate in the event of a rejoinder upon rejoinder by two or more parties on a controversial subject.

18. Protection of Children

Children should not be identified in cases concerning sexual offences, whether as victims, witnesses or defendants.

Except in matters of public interest, for example, cases of child abuse or abandonment, journalists should not normally interview or photograph children on subjects involving their personal welfare in the absence, or without the consent, of a parent or other adult who is responsible for the children. Children should not be approached or photographed while at school and other formal institutions without the permission of school authorities.

In adhering to this principle, a journalist should always take into account specific cases of children in difficult circumstances.

19. Victims of Sexual Offences

The media should not identify victims of sexual assault or publish material likely to contribute to such identification.

Such publications do not serve any legitimate journalistic or public need and may bring social opprobrium to the victims and social embarrassment to their relations, family, friends, community, religious order and to the institutions to which they belong.

20. Use of Pictures and Names

As a general rule, the media should apply caution in the use of pictures and names and should avoid publication when there is a possibility of harming the persons concerned.

Manipulation of pictures in a manner that distorts reality should be avoided. Pictures of grief, disaster and those that embarrass and promote sexism should be discouraged.

21. Innocent Relatives and Friends

The media should generally avoid identifying relatives or friends of persons convicted or accused of crime unless the reference to them is necessary for the full, fair and accurate reporting of the crime or legal proceedings.

22. Acts of Violence

The media should avoid presenting acts of violence, armed robberies, banditry and terrorist activities in a manner that glorifies such anti-social conduct.

Also, newspapers should not allow their columns to be used for writings which tend to encourage or glorify social evils, warlike activities, ethnic, racial or religious hostilities.

23. Editor's Responsibilities

The editor shall assume the responsibility for all content, including advertisements, published in a newspaper. If responsibility is disclaimed, this shall be explicitly stated before hand.

25. Hate Speech

Quoting persons making derogatory remarks based on ethnicity, race, creed, colour and sex shall be avoided. Racist or negative ethnic terms should be avoided.

Careful account should be taken of the possible effect upon the ethnic or racial group concerned, and on the population as a whole, and of the changes in public attitudes as to what is and what is not acceptable when using such terms.

24. Advertisements

The editor should not allow any advertisement which is contrary to any aspect of this Code of Conduct. In this regard, and to the extent applicable, the editor should be guided by the Advertiser's Code of Conduct.

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Media Council of KenyaContact Us

P.O. Box 43132 00100,
Nairobi, Kenya

Email: info@mediacouncil.or.ke
Tel: +254 (020) 272 5032, 2737058
Fax: +254 (020) 272 5032
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