Between citizen and vigilante journalism
New forms of online citizen journalism have refreshed political communication in Africa. New information technologies are providing readers with previously unavailable opportunities to comment and produce their own news and information that is able to influence political processes. However, all is...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
University of Johannesburg
2022-10-01
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Series: | Communicare |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/jcsa/article/view/1675 |
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Summary: | New forms of online citizen journalism have refreshed political communication in Africa. New
information technologies are providing readers with previously unavailable opportunities to
comment and produce their own news and information that is able to influence political processes.
However, all is not rosy about Africa’s new citizen journalism. While it has produced reliable and
quality information that African democracies require, it has also produced vigilante journalism - a
vindictive and revengeful form of gathering and disseminating news and information. Vigilante
journalism is similar to the necklacing that was common in South African in the 1980s. The article
discusses how, at the height of the Zimbabwe crisis (2007-2008), the news website, ZimDaily, led
a vigilante campaign to publicly name and have perceived relatives and children of Zimbabwean
ruling party officials deported from ‘Western’ countries. The idea was to help resolve the political
and economic crises in Zimbabwe. The editors refused to question the ethics and morality of
the exercise. Thus, encouraged by the website’s editors, Zimbabwean users of the website took
the law in their own hands and published addresses, telephone numbers and other personal
information about anyone thought to be related to those in government in Zimbabwe. This blurred
the boundaries between citizen and vigilante journalism. The resultant vigilante journalism by
groups seeking instant justice was in a way similar to the necklacing, even though this was in a
virtual sense. It is clear that the emerging new media spaces in Africa function like double-edged
swords able to either build or destroy democracy.
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ISSN: | 0259-0069 2957-7950 |