Unmasking child abuse with mobile phones


  1. Olivier Nyirubugara, Voices of Africa Media Foundation senior coach
    Mobile phones used as reporting tools have proven to be efficient child abuse detection right. Used for community journalism, they enable local reporters to cover everyday situations, including those that would seem usual and ordinary at first sight.
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    The concept of mobile reporting, combined with community reporting is changing the way we perceive previously ignored local issues. While they hardly make it into mainstream media, they are now flooding into the cyberspace and the blogosphere thanks to the Web and the mobile phone technologies.

    The power of the mobile phone in the context of community reporting approach resides in its simplicity, both through the ordinary tools used by reporters – the phones which almost everyone knows or owns by now – and through the reporters themselves, who are members of the community being reported about. In this presentation, I want to highlight how one issue – child abuse – is being ‘naturally’ captured and documented by mobile reporters following a training offered by Voices of Africa Media Foundation in various Africa countries.

    The capturing is ‘natural’ in the sense that, viewed locally, the abuse is tolerated, justified, or even approved by communities, who do not perceive them as abuse. The idea is to draw the attention of political leaders and decision makers, who mostly rely on mainstream media, the ones known for neglecting non-profit generating local issues.