The following item was seen on Africanews.com via a Google alert. It
concerns a meeting of bloggers from around Africa this past September.
A number of blogs are being written in African languages, notably Swahili.


Africa: Time for update on blogosphere
http://www.africanews.com/site/list_messages/11621
   1.
      Posted on Wednesday 19 September 2007 - 13:57
      elvira
          * Profile
          * 1 messages
      Elvira van Noort, Grahamstown, South Africa
      AfricaNews -The African blogosphere is on the move. An explosive
growth in blogs and the coming of different Web 2.0 tools continue to
change the South African online media landscape. The rest of Africa is
also on the move: with many challenges and restrictions in place the
continent sees a growth in kiSwahili blogs.
      Foreign_Ministry_DK_ict_education_africa
      The Digital Citizen Indaba (DCI) took place in Grahamstown,
South Africa on the 8th and 9th of September. The crème-de-la-crème of
the African blogosphere, numerous Internet professionals, and media
workers converged to discuss topics running from Web 2.0 to blogs in
rural areas and from cyberactivism to monetising your blog.

      But did the African blogosphere really change since last years' DCI?

      Arthur Goldstuck from the South African Internet research
company World Wide Worx argues that it did. By the end of August he
counted 25 037 South African blogs. To explain this phenomenon
Goldstuck refers to the launch of five webtools that simplify the
lives of bloggers and readers of blogs. The first one is Afrigator,
the first-ever African blog aggregator on the continent. The launch of
Amatomu and My Digital Life, both South African blog trackers, and the
start of the new daily The Times newspaper that uses multi-media and
social network tools are the other tools. There was also a rise in the
number of South Africans on Facebook: from 80 000 at the end of June
to 244 000 on the 5th of September.

      A more practical example of the impact of blogs in South Africa
was given by Guy Berger, Head of the School of Journalism at Rhodes
University in Grahamstown. During his presentation at DCI he referred
to a blogger who published a list of prominent South Africans on his
weblog and stated that he had sex with them when he worked as a sexworker.

      The story turned out to be a lie but within a week newspapers,
online news websites and the blogosphere were writing about it. What
we couldn't think of a year ago now happened: a South African blogger
faced criminal charges and a member of parliament shouted that the
South African blogosphere needs to be regulated. This takes South
Africa down a long dark path of the old endless discussion: how to
regulate information on the Internet? And what are bloggers allowed or
not allowed to publish?

      Changes over the continent

      Besides the obvious changes in the South African blogosphere the
rest of the continent is also moving. There are still many challenges
but most delegates and speakers at this years' DCI are positive.

      Remmy Nweke, senior ICT journalist in Nigeria, argues that
"prices of owning a personal computer and other Internet tools
continue to reduce and more and more journalists grasp the opportunity
of blogging to increase local content on the continent". Nweke gives
his own blog as an example.

      The situation is different in Ethiopia. Habtamu Dugo, a lecturer
from Ethiopia, explains that there is still a filtering regime in
place. "Because of the filtering system Ethiopians don't have access
to numerous popular blogs and news websites". Dugo blogs anonymously
because of the press freedom restrictions he encounters.

      Blogging in kiSwahili

      KiSwahili, an African language spoken in fifteen countries, has
found itself a place in the African blogosphere. It was not a point of
discussion at last years' DCI but this year Ansbert Ngumuro from Free
Media explain clarifies its importance: "it makes blogs accessible to
around 100 million people who all speak kiSwahili, most of them do not
master English or French". Examples of kiSwahili blogs are Ngumuro's
and Ndesanjo Macha's from Global Voices Online.

      A list of the speakers and their presentations is available on
the DCI website http://dci.ru.ac.za/ . You can find more information
on the DCI blog http://www.thoughtleader.co.za/dci and the DCI Wiki
http://dci.ru.ac.za/wiki/index.php/Main_Page .


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