Tanzania Media Women’s Association, Zanzibar (TAMWA - ZNZ) urges the community to refrain from recording children and posting on the social media networks after they have been subjected to humiliating acts. By doing so, is to aggravate the problem and is humiliating them even more.
Following the spread of smartphones there have been people who record children and
distribute their information through pictures, audio and video contrary to the
procedures and ethics of journalism.
TAMWA, ZNZ believes that these people may have
good intentions seeking justice to the children but strongly advises them not
to do that work and instead leave it to journalists who have studied the work
and thus know how to hide the identity of the children.
According to the Children’s Act Na. 6, 2011 section 33 (1), no person shall publish any information or a
photograph that may lead to the identification of an abused child except with
the permission of the court.
In a recent study conducted by TAMWA Zanzibar,
it was found that most journalists understand the importance of protecting children
from social media and their news by veiling their identities. Therefore, videos that reveal and expose children’s
information are often from non-professional journalists.
The recent trending incident via social media
networks involves a child who is alleged to have been abused by a guardian
father who has not yet been convicted by law enforcement agencies, therefore, TAMWA ZNZ calls for the government and
relevant agencies to administer severe punishment to the suspects when the
truth is revealed so that it will be a lesson for others.
Children
have been the main victims of sexual abuse and legal
remedies still remain an uphill task thus affecting them both physically, and psychologically.
According to the Chief Government
Statistician, 1360 incidents of humiliation were reported in 2022, and only 181
incidents, equal to 13 %, got convictions.


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