2007年VOA标准英语-Study Says African Media Growing But Lacks Inde(在线收听) |
By Scott Bobb
The director of one of the sponsors of the study, Steven King of the B.B.C. World Service Trust, says this is due to democratization, globalization and economic growth. "The private media has grown very substantially and that's largely due to liberalization. We've also seen a large growth in some countries in community media stations," said King. The study was conducted by the Trust, Nigeria's Ahmadu Bello University, South Africa's Rhodes University and a network of researchers in 17 African countries. They interviewed more than 300 leaders in media, government, academia and related fields. King says the researchers found a surprising consensus on the state of the media in sub-Saharan Africa. "Radio is still the dominant media although television is growing fast," he said. "And also another significant but not surprising statistic is the growth of mobile telephony and also in some countries a massive uptake of access to internet." However, the report says the media in Africa face many challenges. They are neither strong enough nor independent enough to fulfill their role as the fourth pillar of democracy along with the executive, legislative and judicial branches of government. One of the research leaders, Gerry Power, says state-owned broadcasters tend to dominate but they are not independent. He said, "In many of these countries, despite the liberalization, they tend still to serve the needs of the ruling government and tend to be the mouthpiece of the ruling party." The study says that laws guaranteeing the freedom of the media are lacking in many countries and is not implemented in many where they do exist. In addition, African media suffer from low technical standards, low professional standards and funding shortages. King says, however, that vigorous and independent media are vital in the struggle to end poverty and promote good governance. "In a globalized world people succeed and economic growth happens because of a more liberalized and globalized access to information. And to deny that to many people in the development world is a real brake on development," he said. The study recommends new funding schemes to ensure financial sustainability, more and better coordinated training programs and the implementation of laws that protect the media from interference by government and wealthy private interests. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2007/1/36699.html |