Just another worldview

The Senegal-based Sacha explores the role blogging is playing in providing platforms for grass roots reporting and how the medium is enabling Africans to speak out.

By The Soapbox

When I woke up and switched on my computer this Sunday morning I had a mail from Alex Matthews, a South African blogger with whom I’ve been in touch since a few months through digital media. He invited me to write a piece for “The World View” column of his new blogazine called The Soapbox.

“The Soapbox aims to fight political and cultural apathy and to foster tolerance and a culture of intelligent debate” reads the page dedicated to the new website on his blog Afrodissident! That’s a good one and I will definitely try my best to contribute to its launching! There are many reasons for this.

First the number of young people of our generation who do not recognize ourselves in the views aired on mainstream media is always growing and many of us found in blogging an alternative to traditional and conventional views. Even the number of African journalists who are blogging is increasing everyday as the media for which they are working cannot publish their opinions, bringing evidence of the necessity to open the debate on critical issues elsewhere. Blogging is thus, whether you are a professional of information or a citizen X willing to express your views, not only about commenting the world news or sharing your life. It’s about creating the debate to change opinions and try to make dissident voices heard. Just have a look on Congolese blogs dealing with recurrent Kivu crisis, on Nigerian, Ugandan or Kenyan blogs dealing with homosexuality, on Senegalese, Burkinabese or Liberian blogs that feature mining issues, or on South African or Rwandan blogs trying to heal scars inherited from a recent past, and you’ll understand what I’m talking about!

Then I definitely subscribe to the idea of providing a space in which international viewpoints will meet South African opinions to fight political apathy. Seen from Senegal where I migrated a few years ago and from where everyday young boatpeople are embarking on a dangerous journey to find better livings elsewhere, I am convinced that we need this kind of space more than anything to deconstruct mentalities. Let’s take migration for instance! How could I express anything else than encouragement to migrate as I migrated myself, and as I’m reading everyday blogs of African migrants located everywhere in the world or blogs by European or American migrants in Africa? All of them are not less qualified to understand and talk about realities of the places where they are living than those who were born on these soils. Obviously some migrations reflect the inequalities of the global system. Though I still consider that I have to fight against political apathy — in the Western world or Africa — that tends to consider migration as a plague whereas it’s part of the solution!  We’re talking about aid and cooperation but you know better than me, you, living or coming from Mali, Senegal or Nigeria that remittances are far more useful than the so-called aid. In this case political apathy is that of UN agencies workers who do not say a word or international NGOs who are spending billions in cooperation projects: building wells, planting trees, organizing “cultural awareness events” to make people stay! Political apathy is that of the media reporting on “immigration problem” in the North or praising the so-called cooperation projects in the South! Efforts that are to my mind vain but also counterproductive…

Finally, I would insist on accuracy which is one of the guidelines of The Soapbox platform and one of the principles that should lead every blogger. Opinion matters, but accuracy in reporting underlie its pertinence. Especially in contexts and places which recently have undergone crisis. At least four African states went through coups in the past months (Mauritania, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau and Madagascar – not mentioning places like Kenya or South-Africa who’ve known major troubles last year). Some bloggers did a great job though, reporting while avoiding political polarization which hit the mainstream media at the same time. They’ve found in platforms voicing their documented reports and opinions an opportunity to be heard. I wish The Soapbox will be one of these platforms fed by young people from South Africa and elsewhere, which could nurture their dissidence urge.

Long live The Soapbox!

Sacha is blogger based in Senegal. Read sachaproject, his blog.

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