Telling or Twisting the Truth: Africa’s Reckoning with Communication

africas-reckoning-with-communication

Across the continent, too many governments are confusing propaganda with strategic communication. And the cost is rising.

Propaganda is about control. Strategic communication is about credibility. One distorts to protect power. The other earns trust to sustain it. Yet from state houses to ministries, these terms are still used interchangeably. That confusion isn’t just careless. It is dangerous.

In country after country, what is being described as a “communications strategy” is little more than managed theatre. Press conferences with no questions. Social media pages curated like campaign posters. Briefings designed to distract rather than inform. And when trust collapses, leaders blame the press, foreign agents, or the opposition. Rarely do they stop to examine the message itself.

But the old model has expired. You cannot command the narrative in a world where every citizen carries a camera, a voice, and a network. You cannot lie in one language and expect the truth not to surface in another. You cannot perform trust. You either have it, or you’ve lost it.

Young Africans especially are not passive recipients. They do not wait for news. They produce it. They challenge it. They call out hypocrisy in real time. They know the difference between a leader who shows up and one who hides behind statements. They are not interested in performance. They are watching for consistency.

So why does the propaganda instinct persist?

Part of the answer lies in institutional memory. Ministries of Information were never designed to foster dialogue. They were built to manage perception. Their role was to suppress dissent, not study it. Many governments still operate with that mindset. Communication is treated as a tool for emergencies rather than a core part of governance.

The deeper issue, though, is fear. Transparency exposes fragility. It demands honesty when things go wrong. It requires listening, especially when the feedback is uncomfortable. And too many leaders would rather appear confident than admit uncertainty.

Strategic communication is not about appearance. It is about clarity. It is not soft. It is governance. It is a leadership tool. It is how institutions build and maintain public legitimacy. It requires preparation, internal discipline, and the ability to remain coherent across time, channels, and crises. It means aligning what is said with what is done — because today’s public no longer separates the two.

Kenya offers a useful example. During parts of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Ministry of Health held daily briefings that were calm, factual, and consistent. The messaging was not perfect, but it was steady. And that steadiness, in a moment of global fear, helped build confidence. When information flows predictably, people feel protected.

By contrast, the cost of failed communication is everywhere. Voter turnout drops when citizens no longer believe their votes will matter. Protests erupt not just in response to policy, but to the way leaders speak about it. When governments fall silent, conspiracy theories fill the vacuum. Trust is not always lost in one moment. Sometimes it leaks away slowly — through evasion, arrogance, and absence.

This is not just a domestic failure. The reflex to control rather than clarify is damaging Africa’s global position. This is a continent with cultural strength, intellectual capital, and economic momentum. Yet far too often, Africa’s voice on the global stage is either missing or defensive. We are still represented through vague slogans or unclear messages. And when we fail to tell our story, someone else will step in to tell it for us.

Some countries are starting to rethink their approach. Kenya has shown moments of clarity. Others are beginning to ask the right questions, but have not yet made the structural changes needed to treat communication as a serious instrument of leadership.

That is the decision point. Continue managing perception. Or start earning trust.

Because propaganda may deliver a headline. But only strategy builds a nation.

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