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JOURNAL FOR KENYA'S NATIONAL AIDS CONTROL COUNCIL

December 2005

MEDIA SUPPORT IN HIV/AIDS WAR: NEED FOR CLOSE LIAISON BETWEEN JOURNALISTS AND HIV/AIDS NGOs

(PDF format)

by Mia Malan, Internews Kenya Senior Resident Advisor

In 2003, many Kenyans stopped visiting VCT centers after the media consistently reported that rapid HIV tests have inaccurate results. The sources of the reports were laboratory technicians who were unhappy about the money they were losing on carrying out ELISA tests. VCT centers, it seemed, took away their business.

The story was first published in one of the country's largest daily newspapers. Radio stations followed with early morning bulletins quoting the newspaper. The story spread rapidly. By lunchtime, the news about "inaccurate HIV tests" led almost every radio and television news bulletin.

These misleading and damaging stories were published as a direct result of two things: poor journalism on the part of the news media and bad media relations on the part of the local AIDS organizations.

Had the journalist who first published the story had the knowledge and access to reliable sources at medical institutions and VCT centers, this fiasco could have been prevented.

This is why it is as important to train NGOs and government officials in effective media relations as it is to train journalists on HIV/AIDS reporting.

Very few Kenyan NGOs have a designated person to deal with the media. Even fewer have cultivated personal relationships with journalists or would be willing to give out their home and cell phone numbers to journalists so that they can be reached after hours. Breaking stories such as the VCT one described above happen at unexpected times. When radio journalists wanted to get reaction from government or medical experts for their 6 am bulletins, most did not have access to such people. It may sound like an early hour to be interviewed on the phone, but the discomfort of an early morning interview would have been far less than the efforts to clear up the negative consequences of that story.

But, the same can be said about journalists. The newspaper journalist who broke the story should have at least asked the opinion of a VCT expert to explain the real facts and politics of the AIDS world to him.

Increasing journalists' HIV/AIDS knowledge and giving them access to useful resources will certainly help them to produce more responsible stories. But, this can't be done if a large part of the resources – in this case AIDS experts – do not realize the importance of being available to them and don't understand how the news world works.

That could be one reason why trainings that NGOs offer to the media often don't work. They mostly consist of expert after expert presenting medical issues to journalists without anyone explaining how those issues could become stories.

Part of creating good AIDS journalists, would be to create a pool of journalists who regularly report on these issues. In radio, for example, there are journalists like Esther Macharia from Radio Citizen and Ann Mikia and Sammy Muraya of the KBC. They all have weekly HIV/AIDS programs.

Journalists who often report on HIV/AIDS get the opportunity to develop specialized knowledge on the issue. They also get the chance to create personal relationships with AIDS experts. But they can?t do it alone. They need NGOs to work with them.

 

MEDIA TIPS FOR NGOs

  • If you understand how the media operates, you will be able to manage its coverage of the issues you advocate for to a great extent.
  • Journalists want a news angle to sell a story to their editors. They want the story to be published or aired as much as you want your issue to be heard. If you don't understand what a news angle is, your issue may not be published at all. A news angle is the "So what" part of a story. The part that tells people why they should care about your work. The launch of a new project is not a news angle. The reason why that project will change people's lives, is.
  • People like to read or listen to stories with human faces. They don't just want to hear experts talking; they want to hear the story of a person who is affected by the issue the story is about. Reporters call that a case study. If journalists asks your opinion on, say, the effect of property rights on women, they are likely to also ask your help with finding a woman who has been affected to speak to them. Help them with this – the case study is what will make the story come alive.
  • You need to know your audience. When you organize a media event, you need to first identify who you want the media to reach. Do you want feature articles in newspaper supplements or a short front page news story? Feature and news journalists generally work in different departments and often even have different editors.
  • Develop personal relationships with journalists who report on these issues. Take them out for lunch, or phone them from time to time to inform them about new projects at your NGO and let them see the good work you are doing. You will be surprised about the effect this can have.
  • Radio is the medium that reaches the most people in Kenya. Yet, NGOs and government officials rarely listen to it. There are several quality HIV/AIDS programs with high listenerships. Two examples are:
    • Hope Corner on Radio Citizen at Wednesdays at 2 – 2:30 pm
    • A Stitch in Time on the KBC English Service, Thursdays 11am – 12 am.

Mia Malan is the Senior Resident Advisor of Internews in Kenya. Internews is a USAID funded non-profit organization that trains and supports broadcast journalists in HIV/AIDS reporting. It also trains AIDS NGOs in effective media relations. Telephone: 020- 252492

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