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Sunshine journalism won't help Brand Africa - Trevor Ncube

16 Sep 2010 11:453 commentsBizLike
Many people believe that sunshine journalism, which consists of only telling positive stories about Africa will make Brand Africa go forward and give it a nice feel, but I disagree, said Trevor Ncube, Mail & Guardian Media Group deputy executive chairman, speaking at the Brand Africa 2010 Forum on Thursday, 16 September 2010, in Johannesburg.
Many governments across Africa continue to slam African media, accusing them of being unpatriotic by focusing on negative reporting, thus feeding the international media with key angles to portray the continent in a bad light.

"The good, bad and the ugly"

But Ncube said: "We also have to tell the good, the bad and the ugly about Africa and the triumph against adversity, and put the mirror in front of Africa and say this is [what] Africa looks like.

"Why should we hide stories about HIV/AIDS, mismanagement and corruption?" Ncube asked, adding that by doing so, Africans will learn from their mistakes and improve the brand's reputation and image.

Furthermore, he said the deficit of skills in African newsrooms and the precarious position of media ownership in Africa limit the ability of African media to tell the story of brand Africa in an authoritative manner and with fierce leadership.

Wildlife, starving poor covered

London-based Anver Versi, editor of African Business and African Bank, said there are only two stories being told in the west, Africa's wildlife, which is well covered, and the poor starving Africa.

"As a result, all Africa's successful business stories go unnoticed and are hardly mentioned, which is bad for brand Africa," he said.

"People are always worried in the west. When something happens in the DRC or Somalia, they quickly say Africa is unstable and war-torn because it is difficult to make a difference between Tunisia and South Africa on one side and the other war-torn countries."

Gary Alfonso, MD of CNBC Africa, said his station has produced 500 000 minutes of Africa content, more than any other station in Africa that usually produces only 15 minutes of Africa content and still call it an African report.

"In short, Kenyans must get their views from Kenyans, Nigerians from Nigerians, not from some analysts from New York," he said.

Local representation

"What matters the most is that local representation must be included in the markets to have a comprehensive view of the situation on the ground."

Mondli Makhanya, SANEF chairman, said African media need to tell African stories with a great quality but in a free environment. "A free media is good for your brand and its future and development."

Anita Soni, chairman of the International Marketing Council (IMC) said Africans' destiny is linked to each other as the continent is not seen as a bunch of 53 countries but as a uniform mainland.

"It is time that the continent took responsibility for its own destiny and abolish the old Africa in order to promote brand Africa," she said.

A reasonable quest - Khoza

Irvin Khoza, of the 2010 Local Organising Committee, said rebranding Africa is a reasonable quest and a mission that must be pursued with vigour to ensure that the continent returns from collapse, hunger and tyranny.

Brand Africa Forum, an initiative of Thebe Ikalafeng, is being organised by the Brand Leadership Academy in conjunction with the Mail & Guardian newspaper, CNBC Africa, South African Airways, African Business magazine, Idholland, and African Media Initiative (AMI).

One delegate, Pierre van der Hoven, CEO of Baobab International, said Africans need to start generating their own positive stories, and not expect western journalists to come here to do positive work about Africa.

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About Issa Sikiti da Silva

Issa Sikiti da Silva is a winner of the 2010 SADC Media Awards (print category). He freelances for various media outlets, local and foreign, and has travelled extensively across Africa. His work has been published both in French and English. He used to contribute to Bizcommunity.com as a senior news writer.View MyBiz profile and articles...
Solly MOENG
Brand Africa needs to be true and clean from the inside...-
In order to be clean and more attractive, Brand Africa must not be promoted on the basis of lies and false claims. Trevor Ncube is absolutely correct: successful brands are not just "poster clean" on the outside while dirty in the inside; their attractiveness must radiate from deep within. By combating corruption, bad governance and other known ills, Africa will be in a better position to position itself as a compelling brand to associate with! Posted on 16 Sep 2010 22:52
Kikuvi Mbinda
Brand Africa-
To promote the image of Africa, only the truth must be told no matter how bitter is the truth. Posted on 14 Apr 2011 14:22
Emmanuel ONYEJEOSE
Brand Africa needs to be true and clean from the inside-
Trevor Ncube's view is true but difficult pill to swallow. If swallowed with relics, it could mean voting for perpetuating Afro-pessism and/or sanctioning neo-colonialist stero-type yellow journalism. It is well said that the media need to tell it as it is but the negativistic aspect is that the Western media would profit out of it all is also another worry. The pegging point of sunshine and yellow journalism could become elusive taking into consideration of the ideals for curbing corruption and the need for forstering good governance on the one hand; and the concept of media suppression by tyrants in Africa.The remedy - all obnoxious media laws must go in Africa and sound training put in the news rooms to wards off reliance onexternal image creation but creating patriotism and home made Africa brand Posted on 17 Sep 2010 15:07
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