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NEW DELHI: 'Journalists are always under threat - free media is
disappearing, along with democratic dissent and alternative viewpoints
to those in power and in government - and therefore the time has
come for Citizen Journalism - journalism of the people, by the people,
for the people, according to the Srilankan non-governmental organization
ICT4PEACE.
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The responsibility of citizens in securing
peace goes hand in hand with the privileges of citizenship - this
is the fundamental basis of democracy, according to Sanjana Hattotuwa
who started the NGO to involve the common citizens in the ongoing
strife in the island nation.
A former graduate of Delhi University, Hattotuwa has also been the
Coordinator of the Media Unit at the Centre for Policy Alternatives
(CPA) in Colombo, Sri Lanka and has written widely on topics related
to media, conflict and technology for peace building.
Addressing a meet on 'The Role of Citizen Journalism in Peace-building'
in Madrid over the weekend, he said this is not always possible using
mainstream media - mainstream media itself is resistant to change,
has its own bias, is driven by market economics (what bleeds leads)
and has failed, to date, to adopt public service journalism values
He said the responsibility of citizens in securing peace goes hand
in hand with the privileges of citizenship - this is the fundamental
basis of democracy. Citizens in favour of peace, justice and democracy
need to expand and strengthen their voices in an hostile environment
Referring to situations like that in Sri Lanka, he said citizens need
to engage more with all media - mainstream, alternative, print, electronic,
web etc. Increasing violence results in ever narrowing viewpoints
and opinions in mainstream media, restrictions on civil society activities,
and anxiety & fear amongst advocates of peace
'Citizens in favour of peace, justice and democracy need to expand
and strengthen their voices in an hostile environment', he added.
Citizen journalism does not aim to, and cannot replace, mainstream
media. Committed Civil Society activists and ordinary citizens can
now use new ways of getting their voices heard, facilitated through
the web and internet, and the increasing use of PCs and mobile phones
Citizen journalism, also known as "participatory journalism,"
is the act of citizens "playing an active role in the process
of collecting, reporting, analyzing and disseminating news and information,"
according to the seminal report 'We Media: How Audiences are shaping
the future of news and information'. "The intent of this participation
is to provide independent, reliable, accurate, wide-ranging and relevant
information that a democracy requires."
The resulting content is not usually that which mainstream media focuses
on, and explores ground conditions, issues of corruption, human rights
violations, ceasefire violations, humanitarian concerns and issues
related to peace and democracy through perspectives one would not
have otherwise seen, heard or read.
Since governments are accountable to citizens, the voices of the Citizen
Journalists, when amplified and distributed amongst a larger constituency,
fuels social and political change. Mainstream media, through public
service values, can help in this effort. But citizen journalism is
not public service journalism. Citizen journalism is about citizens
writing on what impacts their lives, and how they perceive the world
around them. No journalists mediate this communication. |
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