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UNESCO Equips Young People to Tackle COVID-19 Disinformation in Eastern Africa

In the wake of ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, 91Â鶹¹ú²ú¾«Æ·×ÔÅÄ supported a series of virtual trainings for young people on how to spot and counter disinformation about the pandemic online and offline in Eastern Africa. These trainings are part of multi-stakeholder efforts to create awareness about the COVID-19 pandemic, and counter the prevailing online mis/disinformation about the pandemic.  As part of these efforts, digital platforms such as Facebook and Twitter have also taken steps in dealing with problem, including guidelines and restrictions on posting anti-vaccine information, as well as flagging posts online.

The two days, three-part training sessions were held between the 15th to 30th July 2021, targeting young people across Eastern Africa. They attracted 347 young people (183 men and 164 women) from youth-led organizations, civil society organizations, community centres, community-based organizations, colleagues and universities in Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, Somalia, and Seychelles. They were conducted by in close partnership with Search for Common Ground, ,  with the support of through its -funded project, as part of the .

The trainings equipped young people with competencies and knowledge on media and information literacy, tackling mis/disinformation about COVID-19 pandemic within their local communities, centres, groups, organizations, and practical skills to ensure their own online safety and security.

During the training, Mr. Kenneth Okwaroh, the Executive Director, Africa Center for People, Institutions and Society, acknowledged the important role of young people in digital platforms.

Considering that the majority of the youth are active on social media platforms, they can help combat the spread of false information by constantly verifying and double-checking information before sharing it online. Thus, such training opportunities are important in equipping them with fact-checking skills to enable them differentiate real from fake news.
Mr. Kenneth Okwaroh, the Executive Director, Africa Center for People, Institutions and Society

Mr. John Okande, National Programme Officer for Communication and Information Sector at UNESCO elaborated on the objective of UNESCO support to such efforts.

The reason UNESCO is supporting this initiative is to prepare young people to be responsible actors within the digital sphere and local communities to respond to the current reality we face, that is the infodemic during the COVID-19 pandemic in Eastern Africa.
Mr. John Okande, UNESCO Regional Office for Eastern Africa

He further reiterated UNESCO continuous efforts towards equipping young women and men with requisite skills that they can use and transfer to their organizations or associations and be able to ensure that factual, accurate and verifiable information is accessed, disseminated and utilized among their local communities.

The virtual trainings were based on modules adapted from the (MIL) curricula,   , and the practical experiences of journalists working in mainstream media across Eastern Africa. The modules covered during the trainings included: i) Information disorder – shapes and forms, impacts of democracy and challenges of addressing information disorder, ii) Verification – reviewing sources and content online, utilizing MIL to combat disinformation and online content verification tools, iii) Fact-checking 101, iv) Role of mainstream media in tackling fake news, and v) Combating online abuse.

The participants were also taken through utilization of online content verification tools such as , and

At the end of the training, several participants expressed enthusiasm about the newly acquired knowledge and skills.

This was a good experience. We shared a lot about how this pandemic has led to many rumours on social media platforms, and how people spread misinformation about COVID-19. I have gained from the experiences in different countries because I was not alone. So, thank you very much for the session.
Mr. Thierry Nijimbere, a participant from Yaga organization in Burundi
All these aspects should be emphasized by media houses. They are however not learnt in a day. They require continuous learning through such workshops and related certifications. Thank you ACEPIS and UNESCO for the wonderful webinar. It was very educative.
Mr. Akram Mugerwa, a student from Makerere University in Uganda
Rights go with responsibilities! As long as we apply freedom of speech and rights to access information let us not forget to be responsible.
Ms. Jennifer Kayombo, Sexual and Reproductive Health Rights (SRHR) and Gender Expert from Tanzania
The training was quite informative, it was good for sure I now know the difference between disinformation and misinformation and how to think carefully about information before you share it.
Hirima Lempushunah, Naretoi Development Initiative in Kenya

Mr. John Okande called for responsible citizenship among young people with abilities to identify and debunk false information and myths from their communities about COVID-19 and ongoing vaccination initiatives, as part of the broader initiatives to tackle the pandemic in Eastern Africa.

Enhancing Media and Information Literacy (MIL) competencies among youth organizations and other stakeholders is a key action of UNESCO strategy to promote knowledge societies and foster the development of free, independent and pluralistic media and universal access to information and knowledge for good governance. These series of training were part of efforts by UNESCO aimed at strengthening community media policy and practice and empowering the youth through MIL in Eastern Africa.

About the #CoronavirusFacts project

Based on the central tenet that information is the opposite of disinformation, the UNESCO project #CoronavirusFacts leverages the pivotal role of freedom of expression and access to information to address information needs in times of COVID-19 and to tackle the massive wave of disinformation which threatens to impact democracy, sustainable development and stability around the world. Funded by the European Union, the project supports professional, diverse and independent media’s capacity to report on the pandemic; strengthens local fact-checking organizations to debunk misinformation; and empowers youth and other citizens to critically process what they read and hear linked to COVID-19 through training in media and information literacy.