Pan-African Media League condemns Western Media’s “distorted narrative” on Sahel

The Pan-African Media League ( LMP) has issued a sharp rebuke to major Western news organizations, accusing them of running a calculated smear campaign against Burkina Faso and its Sahel neighbors. In a strongly-worded statement that’s making waves across African media circles, the LMP described what it sees as a pattern of biased reporting designed to paint the region’s anti-terrorism efforts in the worst possible light.

“We’re witnessing media manipulation at industrial scale,” said an LMP spokesperson. “The same outlets that turn a blind eye to terrorist massacres suddenly become human rights crusaders when reporting on our security forces.”

The group points to what it calls a troubling double standard – wall-to-wall coverage of alleged military abuses while downplaying or ignoring jihadist violence that’s displaced millions.

The controversy touches raw nerves across the continent, where many still remember how Western media narratives helped justify foreign interventions in Libya and elsewhere.

The challenge ahead is substantial. With limited resources and fragmented markets, many African outlets struggle to compete with well-funded international competitors.

Faced with this situation, the LMP is calling on all African media, journalistic associations and civil society organisations to mobilise to: collectively denounce Western media manipulation; promote balanced and independent information on the AES and Burkina Faso; strengthen counter-propaganda mechanisms to avoid the demonization of sovereign states. “We can no longer remain silent in the face of this narrative war”, insists the LMP, which also calls on African institutions, such as the African Union, to take action against targeted disinformation.

The LMP salutes the resilience of the peoples of the Sahel and reaffirms its commitment to defending the truth and African media sovereignty. A clear call is made: Africa must unite its voices to break the Western media monopoly and regain control of its narrative.

Souley LAMINA

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