A recent media monitoring study by the Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) has shown that politically-affiliated media organisations perpetrate over 50% of media ethics violations in Ghana.
The study which covered the period June 2020 to May 2021 found that out of the total of 2,710 ethical violations recorded on the media organisations monitored, 1,469 violations, representing 54% were attributed to media organisations that are pro-partisan or affiliated with a known political party. Two of such media organisations, Power FM and Oman FM, were noted to be among the worst culprits of ethical infractions. Some shows of these partisan radio stations occupied the top five spots of programmes that recorded the highest frequency of ethical violations during the monitoring.
The Media Foundation for West Africa between June 2020 and May 2021 monitored the incidents of ethical infractions/violations on 26 influential media organisations made of up 10 radio stations, 10 newspapers and six news websites. The objective was to identify such incidents and draw attention to the breaches as a way of fostering adherence to ethical principles by media organisations.
A total of 22,271 media content was monitored out of which 2,710 ethical violations were recorded. Out of the total 2,710 ethical violations recorded, 1,754 (65%) were recorded on radio, 906 violations (33%) were recorded on News websites whilst 50 (2%) were recorded by Newspapers.
Power FM, Oman FM and Accra FM (all politically-affiliated) topped the radio violation chart. Ghanaweb.com topped the news website chart with a whopping 906 violations whilst the Daily Guide newspaper, topped the newspaper chart with 27 violations.
Ethical principles violated
Decency (1,292) was the most violated ethical principle, followed by Accuracy (574), with Good Taste and Public Sensibilities (478) being the third-most violated principle. Power FM was the highest violator of the principle of Decency (364) whilst Oman FM took the number one spot as the highest offender of the principle of Accuracy (273).
Inside Politics, an afternoon political talk show hosted by Mugabe Maase on Power FM, recorded the highest violation with 411 incidents followed by National Agenda, Oman FM’s morning show hosted by Yaw Amofa, recording 326 violations.
The Media Ethics Monitoring project formed part of MFWA’s work aimed at enhancing media professionalism to inspire public confidence and support for press freedom in Ghana. It was implemented with funding support from the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands.
The full report contains the total ethical principles violated, the names of the media outlets on which those infractions were made, among other findings. Click here to access the report. The instrument used for the monitoring, which contains the category definitions for tracking and reporting of ethical principles, is also available here.
For further clarifications, contact the Programme Manager, Abigail Larbi-Odei (0244867047) or Programme Officer, Kwaku Krobea Asante (0249484528).