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More details on alleged post-election violence perps

This is the most detailed document I’ve seen so far. The press has been dancing around the names probably because of the fear of libel suits.

Hat tip Steve! (and y’all please keep the leaks coming).

Microsoft Sponsored Kenyan Blogger Conference

So Microsoft is thinking about sponsoring a bloggercon for Kenyan bloggers. If you would be interested in attending such a conference, please leave your details here.

EDIT: Wait to get more details about the event first before signing up.

AOB: Thank you, thank you, thank you for your very kind comments on my TED speech. Truly had no idea what an impact it would make on others :-)

On Why Amnesty for Grand Corruption is a Bad Idea…

Mars Group is (as always) on top of things.

And is it just me, or is John Githongo’s operation rather lame?

AOB: One of the best summaries of Obama’s speech that I’ve read from the pundits (for real some of the talking heads on TV deserve to be slapped).

Look Ma I’m on TV!

So my natural instinct is to want to go off and run and hide somewhere because my Ted talk is finally up on TED’s website…I barely remember what I said, I was so nervous and ish…and its also very personal.

But I might as well enjoy my 15 mins of fame on the interwebs…maybe one day when Gabriella is Googling me in a few years she’ll see that her mama is more than just a mean disciplinarian (hehehe).

Edit: low-bandwidth folk can try Youtube.

KNCHR post-election violence report names

For those who are looking, more details/names can be found in the latest Africa Confidential…click on the link below (hat tip B!).

ac-22aug08

Report on the Kriegler Commission

We are all Commission of Inquiry weary, but this piece gives some good insight on the ongoings at Kriegler and on why the stakes are too high for the real truth to be revealed.

Also worth a read, this article in the Christian Science Monitor.

kptj-truth-digest-bulletin

Kenya in the Olympics

I want to join everyone in congratulating the Kenyan athletes for a tremendous performance…the marathon gold was the icing on the cake.

And then I’m going to rain on the parade by asking why the hell there were more officials than athletes in the Kenyan contigent that went to Beijing? According to the Nation:

A total of 57 athletes travelled to Beijing under AK’s David Okeyo, who was the chief de mission. He led about 60 officials — 22 being technical while the rest were part of the management and government delegation.

Apparently some of the “officials” included the Sports Minister’s kids.

Like M, I’d like to know who the joyriders are…

Whither the citizen war reporter?

Evegeny Morozov, has an interesting piece in Open Democracy looking at the role of citizen journalists in conflict (specifically Georgia). He argues that citizen journalists are not the magic bullet that they’ve been trumped up to be as far as covering news in underreported conflict areas.

While he does have some valid points, I think he is extrapolating too much from the Georgian conflict and being a bit too harsh.

Yes, citizen journalists will never meet the standards of a professional war reporter but the fact is foreign news (and bureaus for that matter) is no longer a priority for media organizations with the capacity to hire professional war reporters and better some (albeit unprofessional) news rather than no news at all.

Yes, there is the risk of bias, jingoism, propaganda etc. as we are seeing in the Georgian conflict but based on my experience during the post-election violence in Kenya the professional media organizations – both local and international – had issues with bias (when they did try and report), were way off the mark as well, offered little nuance and investigative reporting, and pretty much dropped the ball. The only media organization that stood out for me was Al-Jazeera. Just because an organization is professional – doesn’t mean it is above bias – even CNN and the BBC will put a spin to it…although you might have less a concern about doctored images and false stats.

I get his point that we should not treat citizen journalism as a panacea for the challenges that are besetting traditional media, but I do think he is underestimating the ability of news consumers to separate the wheat from the chaff (hello Fox News!) as far as citizen journalists…at some point is becomes pretty apparent who is doing reliable reporting and who is being a mouth piece and blogging crap…I think at that stage it is up to the news consumer to make their individual judgments. I can live with that rather than a complete news blackout…especially in a conflict zone.