Covering the multiple crises in the Sahel freely is increasingly difficult for journalists, even more so since the military took power in some countries, says Reporters Without Borders in a report published on Monday 3 April.
The Sahelian strip that crosses the continent from west to east threatens to become "
Africa's largest non-information zone
", says RSF in this grim report.
The expulsion of the correspondents of the French dailies
Le Monde
and
Liberation
by the junta in power in Burkina Faso this Saturday further clouded the picture.
The RSF report was written before their expulsion.
“Constant Degradation”
The local and international press has been facing a "
constant degradation
" of its working conditions for ten years, says this document covering Burkina Faso, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Chad, but also northern Benin, confronted to similar security challenges.
It describes journalists caught between the violence of jihadists and armed groups on the one hand, and the restrictions, pressures, media suspensions and expulsions of foreign correspondents by the authorities on the other.
He evokes the negative effect played by the arrival according to him of the Russian private security company Wagner in Mali.
“
Five journalists were murdered, and six others went missing between 2013 and 2023
,” the report said.
It reports nearly 120 journalists arrested or detained during this period, including 72 in Chad alone.
It reports on attacks by jihadists and the disappearance of community radio stations, which were widely listened to, because they did not adhere to their cause.
Vast expanses have become inaccessible to journalists because they are too dangerous.
Media control
The sources are “
terrified
” by the possibility of reprisals from armed groups, but also from the authorities.
In Mali, Burkina and Chad, having barely arrived at the head of their country, the military sought “
to control the media through prohibition or restriction measures, even attacks or arbitrary arrests
”.
RSF recalls the suspension of the French media France 24 and Radio France Internationale in Mali and Burkina.
With the expulsion or the forced departure of foreign correspondents for lack of accreditation, the field is left "
free to the media favorable to the pro-Russian narrative defending the presence of Wagner's mercenaries in the region
", which contributes "
to the explosion disinformation
”.
The pressure exerted on the press in the name of a “
patriotic treatment
” of information favors “
journalism under orders
”, and self-censorship on sensitive subjects such as Wagner or the losses inflicted by the jihadists.
They also fuel cyberbullying against dissonant voices, says RSF.
RSF also mentions the deterioration in the financial situation of the media, under the effect of the crisis and the end of State subsidies.
RSF suggests some glimmers of hope.
She mentions the mirror copy of the RFI and France 24 sites that she created to continue to capture them.
She cites the creation of different modes of collecting information and partnerships between the media, as well as the development of fact-checking.