The Kenya Correspondents Association (KCA) and Kenya Editors Guild (KEG) have today congratulated journalists and the media fraternity for showing solidarity in its opposition to the passage of the oppressive media Bill, the Kenya Information and Communications Amendment Bill 2013 which seeks to undermine media freedom and freedom of expression for Kenyan.
In a statement to the media, KCA Chairman William Janak
and the Vice Chair of the Editors Guild David Ohito said the journalists
would resist attempts to portray them and the media negatively by
sections of the Kenyan leadership just because they had continuously and
without fear, pointed out ills bedeviling the country and demanded
accountability.
The two journalists organizations said they
had noted with satisfaction the growing level of consciousness among
journalists of their rights as demonstrated through their response to
the attempts by the executive and the National Assembly to work in
tandem to undermine press freedom and by extension the democratic space
Kenyans have fought and died for over the last three decades.
"This is the time to show the Government, all Kenyan
leaders and Members of the National Assembly that the media, as the
Fourth Estate - should not be treated with the casualness and disdain
that we continue to see and which is now being entrenched into law with
the aim of intimidating this this important Estate into silence," said
KCA Chairman William Oloo Janak
The Vice Chairman of the Editors Guild David Ohito said
the media in Kenya had matured into a solid group and important
stakeholders in this country which had been at the forefront of the
fight for freedom and accountability.
"It is unacceptable that some people within the
government and the National Assembly should suddenly choose to
misrepresent this role and claim the media is irresponsible and pass
laws to intimidate it into silence when efforts have been made by the
industry at achieving effective self regulation," said Ohito.
The two leaders said the media industry was in agreement
that all previous laws touching on the industry be aligned with the
Constitution of Kenya 2010 adding that extensive consultations had been
made and consensus reached.
" Media stakeholders have been taken a back by the lack
of honesty and goodwill on the part of the government and the
Parliamentary Committee on Energy and Communications which has
manifested itself in their choice to completely ignore the stakeholder
input and come up with provisions that not only hurt the media but
violate the constitution," the two said in a statement.
They said consultations were going on on various options
to be adopted by media stakeholders to deal with this " determined
onslaught on media freedom and which is an attempt to deny Kenyans
channels of free expressions to exercises their civic liberties as
enshrined in the constitution,"
They urged journalists to remain vigilant and united
adding that the media industry was still lobbying the president to
return the Bill to the National Assembly for amendments and further
stakeholder input and agreement.
"We would like Members of the Senate, to also play their
complimentary role of checking on the laws being passed by their
colleagues in the National Assembly to ensure the gains made under the
new constitution are not eroded and Kenyans taken back to the dark days,"
the two added.
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