JOSEPH ODINDO, EDITOR OF 'HOUNDED' WITH KONRAD ADENAUER'S CHRISTOPHER PLATE AND SOMALI JOURNALIST AT BOOK LAUNCH
AFRICAN JOURNALISTS IN EXILE BOOK LAUNCHED (UNREVISED)
By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (17.March 2021but not published)
Tuesday
night’s book launch of Joseph Odindo’s ‘Hounded: African Journalists in Exile’
at the Trademark Hotel in Village Market attracted a multitude of Kenyan
journalists who had worked with Odindo in local media over the years.
Some had
been with him when he was editorial director of the Nation Media Group. Others
had worked with him in his similar role at the Standard Group. And still others
had been with him when he was founding editor of The East African.
‘Hounded’
itself reveals harrowing stories of 16 African journalists who were forced to
flee their countries for having insisted on speaking truth to power and holding
their governments to account. Their struggles have been rarely reported in the
world media, which is one reason why the book is an important contribution to
shedding light on what has been happening in post-colonial Africa.
The book’s
publisher and Director of the Konrad Adenauer Stiftung (KAS) Media Program,
Christoph Plate noted that exile has had a long and difficult history in
Germany. He recalled that critical thinkers frequently had to flee his country
during the Nazi regime of Adolf Hitler and then during the Communist era as
well.
Following
along that line, Joe Odindo said Konrad Adenauer Stiftung had originally
planned a conference calling exiled African journalists to come share their
stories in person. But once COVID cancelled that plan, Odindo got the call.
“I was
invited to essentially transform the conference into a book,” he says. “The
book came together in eight or nine months despite our never meeting face to
face. It showed me the incredible power of digital communication,” he added.
The 16
countries whose journalists have had to flee include Burundi, Cameroon, Chad,
Eritrea, Ethiopian, Gambia, Lesotho, Madagascar, Nigeria, Rwanda, Somalia,
Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, Zimbabwe, and Kenya. The stories are written all by the
journalists themselves, including Odindo’s editorial touches.
The only
self-exiled Kenyan journalist in ‘Hounded’ is Pius Nyamora, founder of
‘Society’, one of the leading so-called ‘Protest Press’ publications in the
late 1980s and early 1990s when the ‘Second Liberation’ loosened President arap
Moi’s grip on power.
Nyamora’s
story is an important one because it not only reveals the deeply repressive
nature of the Moi regime. It also reminds us of other fearless Kenyan
journalists who suffered at the hands of Moi, such as Gitobu Imanyara of the
‘Nairobi Law Monthly’ and ‘Finance’s Njeru Gakabaki. And as Nyamora wrote in ‘A
reform struggle’s radical voice’, “I believe we had made a difference by
denting the confidence and image of their authoritarian machine.”
The only
exiled journalist in the book who returned to his country to carry on the
struggle of exposing the injustices inflicted on ordinary Somali people by Al
Shabab is Abdalle Ahmed Mumin. Abdalle is also the only one who was able to fly
in for the book launch to share his story of remarkable courage and resilience.
Copies of
Hounded: African Journalists in Exile can be obtained through the Konrad
Adenauer Stiftung offices in Johannesburg.
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