This week, news sources everywhere reported concern for the
Gambia’s decision to mandate female government employees to cover their hair at
work. Everywhere, that is, but in the Gambia, a country with a Freedom House Freedom of the Press status of ‘Not Free’ and a 15-year jail sentence for “using
the internet to spread false news or make derogatory statements, incite
dissatisfaction, or instigate violence against the government or public
officials”:
The Daily Observer,
Gambia’s national newspaper that learned the hard way to take a pro-government stance, has yet to publish a word
about Monday’s Executive Directive. In contrast, its recent reports paint a
rather pro-woman portrait of President Yahya Jammeh:
Step outside the Gambia to Freedom Newspaper, a U.S.-based
Gambian online news source, and Jammeh and his wife are presented as anything but presidential:
Similarly, U.S.-based VICE News, an international news
organization, offered a more neutral headline, but was not shy in sharing the
many shortcomings and human rights abuses attributed to Jammeh in its ensuing
exposé:
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Want to know more about place-based media bias? Read on!
SumRando Cybersecurity is a South Africa-based VPN, Web Proxy and Secure Messenger provider.
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