Document details

It is about their story: How China, Turkey and Russia influence the media in Africa

Johannesburg: Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung (KAS) (2021), 130 pp.

ISBN 978-0-620-91386 -7 (print); 978-0-620-91387- 4 (e-book)

CC BY-NC-ND

"Looking at media involvement in Africa, one can only state that the continent is more important than ever. Next to traditional actors like the BBC or Radio France International, and to a smaller extent of Deutsche Welle or Radio Swiss International, there are new players. They do not seem to have the same agendas as the older ones, but they bring about new versions of journalism, of attempted influence and propaganda. What differentiates them is, in the case of China, that funds do not seem to matter much. In the case of Turkey, that more and more scholarships are being offered and when it comes to Russia, that old alliances of the USSR in the Cold War are being reactivated. What separates them even further from the old players are the values that they stand for and try to propagate. They are offering a journalism that praises their own autocratic models of rule and, in the case of China in particular, they promote a positive journalism, that does not ask uneasy questions, a journalism that does not offend or hurt, but that usually pleases the powers-that-be." (Foreword)
Sino-African Media Cooperation: An Overview of a Longstanding Asymmetric Relationship / Dani Madrid-Morales, 9
I want you to want me: Turkey and Africa’s media / Deniz Börekci & Dieter Löffler, 71
Weaponry, raw materials and propaganda; Russia’s new arrival on the continent / Anna Birkevich, 113