Pluto Press/Fountain Publishers,
2007
- Topic(s) of work:
- Public Media
Abstract
The news media played a crucial role in the 1994 Rwanda genocide:
local media fuelled the killings, while the international media either
ignored or seriously misconstrued what was happening.
This
is the first book to explore both sides of that media equation. The
book examines how local radio and print media were used as a tool of
hate, encouraging neighbours to turn against each other. It also
presents a critique of international media coverage of the cataclysmic
events in Rwanda. Bringing together local reporters and commentators
from Rwanda, high-profile Western journalists, and leading media
theorists, this is the only book to identify and probe the extent of
the media’s accountability. It also examines deliberations by the
International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda on the role of the media in
the genocide.
This book is a startling record
of the dangerous influence that the media can have when used as a
political tool or when news organizations and journalists fail to live
up to their responsibilities. The authors put forward suggestions for
the future by outlining how we can avoid censorship and propaganda, and
by arguing for a new responsibility in media reporting. The book
includes an opening statement from Kofi Annan and an introduction by
Senator Roméo Dallaire.
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