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Media Foundation for West Africa punches holes in Anas’ Number 12 exposé

Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) has labelled the methods used by Anas Aremeyaw Anas to carry out the Number 12 investigative piece as unacceptable.

The multi award winning journalist premiered his latest piece dubbed Number 12 on 6th June to expose corruption in Ghana football.

Several football and match officials were caught on camera receiving monies suspected to be bribes, with the then president of the Ghana Football Association, Kwesi Nyantakyi at the centre of the scandal.

Kennedy Agyapong has questioned the methods Anas Aremeyaw Anas uses for his investigation and has made attempts to expose the undercover journalist by premiering a video titled ‘Who Watches the Watchman’

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And Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) is the latest to raise questions about the modus operandi of Anas Aremeyaw Anas.

MFWA, in a statement from its Executive Director, Sulemana Braimah, observed that the methods used by Anas in his investigative piece were unacceptable.

The statement said “I agree the documentary has made an impact. But what is also true is that the impact it has made is not because it’s a piece of journalistic work.”

It added that “Indeed, if agents from the Bureau of National Investigations (BNI), police, national security or any member of the public were to use the same methods to procure, edit and screen the same product, the impact could be the same.”

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“So if a similar piece of documentary were to be produced and aired by a BNI or police officer, will it qualify to be called a piece of investigative work?”

“You may say no because your answer could be that the BNI or police officer is not a journalist.”

According to MFWA, “What makes a piece of work journalistic is not necessarily whether or not the producer is a journalist.”

“Instead, it is whether or not the work was produced using journalistically acceptable methods and procedures.”

It indicated that once the Number 12 documentary was actually presented as a journalistic work, the processes for procuring the content must be accepted in journalism.

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“Don’t get me wrong, I am not saying undercover journalism, subterfuge journalism, deception journalism or sting journalism is not acceptable. They are acceptable forms of journalism. But when such methods are used by a journalist, there are ethical rules that must be followed in order to establish a difference between a journalistic undercover work and an undercover work by security operatives.”

“In order words, regardless of the methods employed, a journalist is only to report, reveal, or disclose events, activities, happenings or acts that exist. Such events, acts, happenings or activities cannot and must not be ones triggered, prompted, promoted, activated, enabled or created by the journalist.”

“But this is exactly what Anas and his team did for the Number 12 documentary. They triggered, prompted, promoted, activated and enabled the actions that constituted the contents of the Number 12 documentary,” according to the statement.

“We know that in order to have something to record for a story and the Number 12 documentary for that matter, Anas and his team deceptively engaged the subjects, posed as interested parties, paid monies to them in some cases and then recorded the process.”

“So basically, but for the actions of Anas and his team, there would have been no actions to record, no files to edit and no Number 12 documentary. So how can that be journalism?”

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“I have heard claims that the methods used to procure the content for the Number 12 documentary are acceptable methods under the Ofcom (the British Communications regulator) rules. I have read the Ofcom rules and nowhere in the rules does it state that it’s acceptable for a journalist to trigger, prompt, co-create or manufacture acts, scenes and record same as a story in the name of undercover or any form of journalism.”

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