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Foko was invited to give a blog workshop for IST students

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

FBC during a workshop at IST

Last Saturday, Foko crew was in action again teaching blog and new media to IST students. The IST (fr) is a renowned private institute located in Ampasampito (not far away from downtown) that proposes several fields of studies to its students.

Stéphane was contacted by the one of the first responsables of the event and she asked him if Foko could hold a workshop in their cybercafé prior to their official graduation ceremony. In an ordinary day, students should pay to have Internet access but for this time it was for free. Then, we, as zealous volunteers, arrived there at 7:30am (I was a bit late in fact) ready with brochures and handouts about blogs, twitter and … Foko of course :) .

The first group arrived an hour and a half later after we spent our time brainstorming how we were going to manage it and sticking Foko posters in some strategic (lol) spots of the block. I stood next to the main door to invite people to get in because they were a bit shy at the begining “Is it here … the workshop on blogs?”. And because of this shyness we had to send Pati and Ariniaina to make them aware that it is warmer and more interesting inside :D

The workshop went well in a good ambiance and the connection speed didn’t spoil it too much. We noticed that few of them were more curious than the others and that led Andry to jump on the basic uses of Twitter (yes, they wanted more and more) after being through with Wordpress.

What surprised me during the workshop was these ladies, I guess they are teachers, whom Ariniaina and Affick took good care of. And according to what I overheard, they had a lot of questions. The room was not wide enough for the students and somehow made (some of) them go away before the end of the workshop. But the good thing is they asked for another workshop.

I’m waiting for the list of the new IST bloggers to put it here but meanwhile you can have a look at the photos taken during the workshop.

[Update] Here is the list of the IST bloggers

http://fichristel.wordpress.com
http://njaranga.wordpress.com
http://quiidam.wordpress.com
http://ramelolive.wordpress.com
http://sorohitra.wordpress.com

The Soul of the #NewMachine Human Rights Conference Recap from a Madagascar Viewpoint

Monday, May 11th, 2009

On May 4-5 2009, the Human Rights Center at University of California Berkeley organized the Soul of the New Machine Conference on Human Rights, technology and new media to share best practices and develop new strategies for incorporating technology to address human rights abuses. A few partners and friends were part of the panel of presenters, among them Ken Banks of FrontlineSMS, Erik Hersman of Ushahidi and David Sasaki, director of Global Voices Outreach program, Rising Voices.

I will go into further details later on how these three organisations have been of tremedous help in documenting the multiple acts of violence during the Madagascar crisis but for more info now, here is an interview by Solana Larsen of Tahina, one of the manager of the foko-ushahidi platform in Antananarivo, Mg.

A New York Hub for the conference was also organized by Cristina Moon and she graciously invited Foko to present their work at the brooklyn location.

As you know, Foko primary mission is to document the everyday lives of Malagasy citizens and local agents of environmental change, not record potential human rights violations by their government. Yet, the ongoing crisis decided otherwise for the time being. The hub was a great opportunity to meet and learn first hand from Human Rights activists present at the event.

The presentation went over the background of the crisis, the known human rights violations that were documented since January 09, the use of new media by tools by the dynamic new media users’ community in Madagascar (both related and non-related to Foko) and the obstacles for more extensive reporting of current events. We also posit that among all the past and current human rights violations in Madagascar ( military repression, limited freedom of speech, arrest etc..) the most glaring offense in our views is the 400,000 people (mostly children) currently at risk of hunger in the South because the political deadlock prevents an effective response.

The fact that Foko is present in 5 different regions of Madagascar is important but still insufficient to provide comprehensive reports from all the regions of a nation twice the size of Great-Britain.

The Conference had a specific emphasis on data accuracy, fact-checking and the use of mobile reporting. Michael Ferola present at the NY hub, has been very kind to offer an analysis of the entire database collected on the foko ushahidi platform. We are evaluating a way to measure the quality of the data and present them in an effective manner.

The videos of the panel discussions at the conference will soon be available on fora.tv

However, here a few important reviews made at the conference:

1)On the panel “PDAs and Phones for Data Collections”, speakers discuss the potential of mobile reporting for providing additional information during humanitarian crises in developing countries. For more info, here is the notes from Erik’s talk at the conference and a post on Kiwanja website on how FrontlineSMS was used in the film “The Reckoning”.
No groundbreaking news here so I will take this opportunity to describe the collaboration with mobile technology experts and thank the people at FrontlineSMS and Ushahidi who worked with us overnight to get the platform ready for sms reports as soon as possible.

As Tahina explained, there were a few obstacles to overcome but FrontlineSMS developpers ( Alex Anderson, Carlos Genz and Ken Banks) provided timely technical support and sped up the release of a new version they were working on to take into account the urgent need for an SMS/computer interface for the Madagascar crisis. We cannot thank them enough for helping us establish the first project to collect SMS reports directly onto a computer via the intelliSMS software.
The Ushahidi team was also tremendous in setting up the platform quickly and showing us how to modify the interface to allow for the translation of key words, categories and timeline.

2) on the panel “Blogging Human Rights”, David Sasaki spoke about the internet tools used to shine a light on issues that media often ignored. He also explained the importance of giving people on site during the opportunity to tell their stories in their own words and stop using proxy as voices for the oppressed. He also emphasized the importance of translation in breaking the “echo chamber” and reaching new audiences about issues that most people are not familiar with. A case in point for this statement that is related to Madagascar is the online petition for Razily, a protester who was arrested on March 28th for flag theft and who has not been heard of since then. The petition has now reached moe than 500 signatures in a week thanks to media attention in different languages (ny marina momba ny Razily news2dago, Madagascar-Tribune, Ethan Zuckerman, Jillian York on Huffington Post and Madagaskar-Vision.de) For the ultimate comprehensive resource on translation and new media, read Chris Salzberg’s thesis on the lingua GV project. (PDF)

Finally, David also emphasized the importance of addressing the safety of citizen journalists

In short, the conference was a reminder that supporting the development of new media users and communities in developing countries is a worthwhile endeveaor, especially considering their added value when a crisis situation breaks out.

[Tananarive] The New Experiences We’ve Got From The Interviews We Had

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

Interviews are not always easy, especially when you are on the phone speaking with a native speaker at thousands km away from where you are at 9:30pm or when you are in a hotel surrounded by wild crowds and gunshots. In fact, some international media got in touch with us – thanks to Foko and Lova, to know more about what’s going on here and to have interviews if possible.
Unfortunately, I can’t tell everything about all of them. What I’ll share here is the couple of times we met with Christina Corbett from BBC/IRIN.

Foko Interview with BBC

We met her first on Mar.5 for she planned on making report about the Malagasy blogosphere’s role during the ongoing unrest. We decided to meet next to Colbert Hotel Antaninarenina with 6 of the FBC bloggers, only 3 were able to make it though. A little while after we started a panicked crowd moved up towards where we were. All the shops around Antaninarenina immediately closed their doors. The 5 of us set up our mind, we had to find a safer place. We ended locked up in Colbert Hotel. It was the first time I went in and it was during an unusual circumstances. The interview went well even if Christina could record some gunshots mixed with our voices.
The second one (Mar.26) was far better. It was in a cyber café, still in Antaninarenina. Yes, we like this corner of the city. For this time she will do it for the BBC radio. So we (pakysse, andry and I) took turn to answer her questions in both Malagasy and English while enjoying our soda (we like it too). We found out it’s pretty close to movie shooting. “Cut, could we please turn down the sound of the TV because it passes Indian songs. We are supposed to be in Madagascar.” she said while laughing. Yes, details are much more important for an audio interview. We were done a hour and a half later. Christina said she would fly to London the next day but would email us the audio record. Looking forward to having it.

To sum up, these interviews are now among the many experiences we’ve had as part of the FBC and we are sure better ones are yet to come.

[note: some published interviews are available here , congrats Foko!]

 

 

That’s from Tamatave

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

Two weeks now, Costa Europa cruise said: ” Bye Bye” to the Tamatave’s pier. Despite the political situation, we really had fun during of our times together. Thanks to all of them: the tourists, the company, and indeed the Aventour Madagascar ( Mrs Amie) who was always risking to organised the tourists outing in the middle of very hot time.

Let’s say fortunately, because three days now, TAC’s employees are manifesting for their right. They are organising a strike in front of their gate now at the time when I’m writing this article. There, the atmosphere is getting hot now. TAC is the one of the privated part into the Tamatave’s port.

In general, here is calm but the outcomes of the crisis are still running after our back. That’s the problem.

To end this, please don’t forget to watch these news videos: http://blip.tv/file/1902754 and http://blip.tv/file/1902661

[Tutoriel] M comme le Micro-blogging, le Média citoyen instantané et spontané

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

 zap.pngListe des Tutoriels sur le Média Citoyen mis à jour régulièrement.

La connexion internet coûte encore plus cher que le simple envoi d’un sms lorsque disponible; rédiger un article sur son blog demande en plus de disponibilité et la necessité d’élaborer son discours (+images, +liens, …). Grâce aux efforts soutenus de Lomelle plus d’une dizaine de membres de Foko ont rejoint le réseau social Facebook (notamment Gaëtan et Antsaa, le premier à Antsirabe et la seconde à Majunga) permettant ainsi aux liens de se consolider et finalement d’approfondir le travail de collaboration déjà bien lancé en 2008.

Messages de Patrick sur son “wall” le 07/02/2009 lors de l’alerte au cyclone Gaël dans la région de l’est de Madagascar au même moment que Patricia chattent avec Sipagasy sur Facebook partageant sa peur lors des manifestations de Tananarive.

zap.pngInscrivez-vous à Twitter : Communiquez votre statut, décrivez ce que vous voyez, partagez une information à la communauté dans une simple annonce de 160 mots. Rajoutez vos amis Foko,layshyuur1lita, ariniainaas2coeur,etc. Pour le coût d’un texto envoyé à l’étranger vous pourrez mettre à jour votre statut en rajoutant votre mobile sur Twitter.

zap.pngPassez par Facebook pour  mettre à jour votre Twitter en suivant ces étapes très simples :http://www.facebook.com/apps/application.php?sid=e32a81243fd26f1a0e18e899f235bda8&id=2231777543&ref=s

Ariniaina faisant preuve de beaucoup de courage et mettant à jour son  Twitter heure par heure durant les évènement sur Tananarive.

zap.png Publication automatique d’images de Flickr sur votre compte Twitter :http://flickr.twittergram.com/

zap.png Publication de vos articles de blogs automatique sur Twitter : http://twitterfeed.com/

zap.pngVotre statut Twitter sur votre blog : http://carocat.co.uk/2007/09/13/how-to-display-your-twitter-status-on-your-wordpresscom-blog/


Challenges FBC Tana Faces During This Crisis

Friday, February 27th, 2009

Despite the difficulties in finding available internet connection downtown, the FBC in Antananarivo is still very active and try to inform the world through either their blogs or lately their tweets. If they are not on the ground, like Mrs Pakysse and Mr Ariel, they try to look for useful information on the Internet or listen to the radio. The discovery of the micro-blogging helped a lot the bloggers since it’s really easy and it doesn’t take much time.
The real challenge that we face here is the “ability to communicate” between us. In fact, it’s really hard to get together, either online or offline, the unrest has made it so. Even if some of us have more opportunities to connect everyday mobile phones remain among the rare ways to get in touch with each other, it’s expensive though.
Anyway, we are still motivated to report news from Madagascar especially during hard time like this. And we always do it with pleasure.