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Mon, 09 Nov 2009 Technology

African Media Leaders Meet in Lagos:Focus on Harnessing Power of New Technologies for Media Development

By World Bank Ghana Office

LAGOS, Nigeria, November 9, 2009 - Over 185 African media owners'

participated in a two-day "African Media Leaders Forum (AMLF)" to discuss

practical ways for strengthening Africa's media development and agreed on a

charter for the African Media Initiative (AMI), a parent body that is

working to improve the media sector across Africa.
"Media have a central role to play in nurturing democracy on the African

continent," said Nduka Obaigbena, CEO and Editor-in-Chief of THISDAY, one of

Africa's leading newspapers. "The African Media Leaders Forum is committed

to improving the business environment for media and to strengthening skills

of African journalists. The Lagos meeting will serve as a launch pad for

concerted, collective actions to promote African media development for the

benefit of all." Mr. Nduka is the founding chairman of the AMLF which held

its first meeting in Dakar, Senegal, one year ago.
The AMLF is the single-largest annual gathering of media owners coming

together to discuss development in Africa and the range of cutting-edge

issues affecting Africa's media industries, just as the African continent is

being buffeted by the global financial crisis, deepening recessionary

trends, and the advent of new, social media technologies that are

fundamentally altering existing media business models all across the globe.

"The African Media Leaders Forum is a nascent body with an ambitious

agenda," said Amadou Mahtar Ba, Acting Executive Director of the African

Media Initiative (AMI). "By convening the Forum in Nigeria, Africa's most

populous democracy, we are sending a message that the strengthening of mass

media systems is an urgent imperative for societal advancement, and needs

the support of governments, business leaders, and civil society."

Headlined speakers at the Lagos meeting represented a Who's Who of top

print, broadcast, and online journalists, including Sam Amuka (Vanguard,

Nigeria), Oh Yeon Ho (Ohmynews, South Korea), Arianna Huffington (The

Huffington Post), Charlayne Hunter-Gault (US National Public Radio), Ted

Koppel (former anchor, ABC's Nightline news), Tumi Magkabo (of Tumi & Co,

formerly with CNN), Trevor Ncube (South Africa's Mail & Guardian), Dele

Olojede (Pulitzer Prize winner), and others.
"We have urgent business, and that business is development," said Trevor

Ncube, Deputy Executive Chairman, Mail & Guardian, addressing his peers.

"Our role is to ensure that we participate in creating a marketplace of

ideas and that media is perceived as an integral partner of the development

process."
The Lagos meeting focused on six critical areas with a view to developing

shared literacy of the issues, and spurring collective action:

Impact of new media technologies on the practice of journalism across Africa

drawing on lessons of experience from other parts of the world;

Need for new business models that are necessary to grow and sustain Africa's

media industries;
Finance for African media development including access to venture capital,

mitigating political risk through innovative guarantee mechanisms, and

creating capacity so that media industries have broader access to various

sources of capital;
Lining mass media to the overall governance agenda in Africa and exploring

ways in which the functioning of the fourth estate can be improved;

Monetizing media content for the development agenda, and exploring the

challenges and opportunities for creating a value-added, sustainable source

of revenue, and
Positioning the African Media Initiative (parent body of the AMLF) as a

broad-based partnership for improving the African media sector and

landscape.
An overarching objective of the Lagos meeting was to explore ways in which

the voices of the vast majority of Africans can be better mobilized to

create a new narrative that is centered on wealth creation, away from the

stereotypical view that emphasizes problems and deficiencies at the expense

of opportunity. The AMLF participants, representing the continent's

influential thinkers and doers, have a key role to play in transforming the

one-dimensional image that shortchanges Africa into the more complex image

that the continent deserves.
"New media are opening up new opportunities to expand the dialogue on the

role of media in sustainable development across Africa," said Eric Chinje,

Manager, Africa Region External Affairs, The World Bank. "Now, more than

ever before, is the time to create a new wealth narrative that can help

improve the everyday lives of millions of Africans who yearn for economic

opportunity, knowledge, and cultural expression."
In keeping with the times, the proceedings and discussions of the AMLF

meeting in Lagos were tweeted, twittered, and broadcast live on social media

websites including www.twitter.com/allafrica.

The full proceedings, including the charter of the African Media Initiative,

is available on www.amlf2009.org
Media contact: Tendai Mhizha, AMLF Forum Director, +234 70 693 81691 +234 70 693 81691, +27 82

9001 204, [email protected]

Development / Ghana / Africa / Modernghana.com

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