Bring It On: Tackling The Challenge of Sustainable Development Journalism in Africa

By: Joseph Warungu | 10/05/2011

Once upon a time in a land far far away from Africa lived Gemini. Its big calling in life was to tell the untold story of the developing world, including Africa. For years it happily fulfilled that role. However, Gemini suffered heart failure and despite huge efforts to resuscitate it, the business eventually breathed its last in 2002.

Why the legendary London based Gemini News Service could not be sustained is a question that has plagued many in the media business including myself. Is it that news from the developing world really doesn’t sell? Is development reporting not sexy enough and self sustaining as a vital arm of journalism?

Well, journalism students from Carleton University in Ontario have taken up the challenge to try and revive and reinvent Gemini with the help of a group of African journalists. Two of the graduate students involved in the pilot project joined me on a panel discussion I chaired at the recently concluded Highway Africa Conference in Cape Town, South Africa, looking at the story of development reporting in Africa and its sustainability as a business.

The rest of the panel comprised veteran journalists highly experienced in telling the African story: Dr Tami Hultman, co-founder and Chief Editorial Officer of AllAfrica Global Media; Paula Fray, founder of FrayIntermedia and Salim Amin, Chairman of Camerapix and A24 Media.

The lively discussion on the nature and future of development reporting was a great spur for me in my new fellowship project with Rhodes University which aims to create a sustainable pan-African network of journalists dedicated to high quality reporting on development.

The lesson from Gemini was that the network has to be able to stand on its own feet even in the face of the ubiquitous political story which dominates much African media. The passionate point from Salim was that Africans must tell their own story. The message from Paula was that development news is vital, gives voice to the unseen and unheard and it pays. The word from Tami was that the African story can succeed beyond the borders of the continent as a global story.

And the conclusion from me: the development story can be compelling, sexy, thought provoking and entertaining. It can shift policy, refocus attention and tackle poverty. How? Watch this space as the Reporting Development Network takes shape across Africa.

Latest News

A Reporter's Guide to The History of Tariffs

This piece was produced in collaboration with the Global Business Journalism program at Tsinghua University. The program is a partnership between ICFJ, Tsinghua University and Bloomberg News.

For most of human history, governments have taxed goods crossing their borders. Tariffs — taxes levied on imports or exports — have financed

Hans Staiger Award Winner Investigates Russian Soldiers Secretly Treated in Belarus Hospitals, Including Those Linked to War Crimes

Leaked data from the Russian Defense Ministry shook the story loose. A team of investigators found that during the first 21 months of the invasion of Ukraine, nearly 1,000 Russian soldiers were treated at Belarusian hospitals, including war crime suspects. These “secret patients,” as they were known, directly tied Belarus to Moscow’s war effort.

I Blew Up on TikTok with Journalism — Here's How You Can, Too

l'll never forget the day when an editor at the BBC told a 25-year-old me that journalists shouldn’t be on TikTok because “there’s so much misinformation on there.” By that point, I had maybe 10,000 followers on the platform, possibly more, and the comment stung. My TikToks, which had amplified my journalism as well as my passion for learning new languages, were well researched and I hoped the direct opposite of misinformation.