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The power of the media in shaping policy and public opinion can not be gainsaid. And, if this is wielded negatively, the consequences can be catastrophic. Rwanda, a neighbour in the region and a fellow East African Community member, learnt this the hard way. The role the media played in the events that culminated in the massacre of close to a million Rwandans, in the 1994 genocide, is well documented. Of particular significance is the use of the word cockroach, which was used to dehumanise the Tutsis. This was akin to what happened in Nazi Germany, where Jews were targeted as the vermin of the human race.
The same appears to be happening in Kenya too. KTN, one of the leading TV stations in the country seems to be setting the pace. In a series that was recently aired on prime time news, Somali refugees are humiliatingly and repeatedly referred to as ‘Mbuzi’ - the equivalent of a goat in Swahili. Using such a demeaning and distasteful word goes against journalistic ethics everywhere in the world, and the same is true for Kenya. Why the editors allowed the usage of such an objectionable term, in contravention of Kenyan media ethics, beats logic.
It is also a known fact that most Kenyans - and that include the elites - can not differentiate between areas in upper Eastern and North-Eastern, and their respective residents as well. Once, I remember - being orientated in a new workplace in Nairobi - a very senior executive asked me whether the provincial headquarters of North-Eastern were indeed in Machakos. There was no doubt in my mind that he was talking of Isiolo, Marsabit and Moyale districts which are part of Eastern and administered from Embu, and not the Machakos as he mistakenly believed in. And, just last year there was an article in the Daily Nation by no less a person than a senior editor at the widely circulated newspaper proclaiming that he had only recently realized that Garissa was indeed part of Kenya.
In addition, many Kenyans do not know that Somali is actually one of the ethnic communities in Kenya. Most only know the derogatory ‘Warya’ and ‘Walaalo’ as the proper name of the community. Many of my friends can not even comprehend that the name Somali is for both nationals of Somalia and ethnic Somalis, whether from Kenya, Ethiopia or Djibouti. I occasionally also come across a negligible minority thinking that the two offensive names are somewhat distinct Kenyan communities. Now, based on this what will stop some other gullible Kenyans to adopt the term ‘Mbuzi’, thinking that it is the official name of a community? Granted, Kenya has national security issues to consider but that should not come at the expense of ensuring the same for Kenyan Somalis. Nevertheless, one important fact that also needs to be borne in mind is that the greater Garissa region hosts the largest number of Somali refugees in Kenya and yet the same was recently voted the safest town in East and Central Africa. Whereas I do not wish to downplay the risks associated with a porous border, a large non-national population in our midst and coupled with the chest thumping and empty rhetoric occasionally issued by al Shabaab, it is clear for those with an objective mind that the hapless Somali refugees are not our greatest threat. It is the fear of muggings, violent robberies and of late kidnapping that should form the core priority for the Kenyan police, and by extension the media. Sadik B. Abdullahi The author has also published the following articles @ WardheerNews:
* Why the number of Somalis in Kenya exploded * The pursuit of an Utopian State is not a priority for Somalia right now ________________________________________________________________ We welcome the submission of all articles for possible publication on WardheerNews.com
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