Second week of election campaign media monitoring - state radio and TV bias continues
Publisher | Reporters Without Borders |
Publication Date | 29 October 2010 |
Related Document(s) | First week of election campaign media monitoring - Fraternité Matin is only public media providing fair coverage... |
Cite as | Reporters Without Borders, Second week of election campaign media monitoring - state radio and TV bias continues, 29 October 2010, available at: https://www.refworld.org/docid/4ccfd481c.html [accessed 6 June 2023] |
Disclaimer | This is not a UNHCR publication. UNHCR is not responsible for, nor does it necessarily endorse, its content. Any views expressed are solely those of the author or publisher and do not necessarily reflect those of UNHCR, the United Nations or its Member States. |
Reporters Without Borders regrets that La Première (the state-owned broadcaster RTI's main TV channel) and state-owned Radio Côte d'Ivoire(RCI) continued to give much more air-time to President Laurent Gbagbo than the other candidates during the second week of the campaign for the first round of Côte d'Ivoire's presidential election.
This violated one of the rules set by the National Broadcasting Council (CNCA), under which the candidates should have received equal treatment from the public radio and TV stations.
Respect for this rule is all the more important for maintaining a level playing field in the election because the CNCA has banned privately-owned non-commercial broadcast media, including TV stations based in the former rebel north, from broadcasting their own programmes about the election campaign.
These media are limited to rebroadcasting the programmes broadcast by La Première and RCI: the "Campaign News Programmes" that are supposed to include a report of equal length about each candidate every two days, the campaign spots produced by the candidates themselves and the "Facing the voters" programme, which each day has been giving a different candidate 90 minutes to present their election platform.
Overall, the rules of equal treatment are being respected in these special election programmes, but the ordinary news programmes, which are forbidden by the CNCA to cover the election campaign, are giving a great deal of coverage to Gbagbo's activities as president. This violates the spirit of equal treatment and is giving him a big media advantage.
Reporters Without Borders again deplores the fact that the CNCA did not conduct a lottery to determine the order in which the candidates appeared on "Facing the voters" and decided that President Gbagbo would appear last (the most advantageous position). The organization hopes that, during the second-round campaign, a debate will be held on La Première and RCI between the two winners of the first round.
Reporters Without Borders hails the conduct of the National Press Council (CNP), which has constantly monitored the print media's campaign coverage in an impartial manner and has issued warnings to newspapers that violated professional ethics by their use of outrageous language and verbal excesses.
The press freedom organization finally congratulates the campaign coverage provided by Fraternité Matin, which has fulfilled his duties as a public-service daily by giving its readers balanced and impartial coverage of the 14 candidates throughout the past two weeks and by contributing in a very positive way to a pluralist political debate.
Mission Reporters Without Borders began monitoring the Ivorian media on 15 October and will continue to do so until the end of the presidential election. Its quantitative and qualitative monitoring is being carried out in Abidjan by a team of observers, who are evaluating the air-time that the public radio and TV stations allocate to the political parties and movements participating in the election. They are also evaluating the space allocated by the public-service daily Fraternité Matin and a number of privately-owned dailies. The aim is to ensure respect for the principle of fairness in the state media and balance in the privately-owned media.
Methodology Reporters Without Borders is observing and measuring the air-time that the candidates get in all the French-language programmes relating to the elections on the public TV station La Première and the public radio station Radio Côte d'Ivoire (RCI). As regards the print media, it is measuring and comparing the column space that each candidate and their supporters and allies get in the public-service daily Fraternité Matin and in a number of privately-owned dailies: Le Nouveau Réveil, Le Patriote and Notre Voie during the first-round campaign, and L'Intelligent d'Abidjan, Soir Info and L'Inter during the second-round campaign. It is also carrying out a qualitative evaluation of the tone used by the journalists and media in their references to the candidates.