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    Al Jazeera, Ushahidi Join in Project to Connect Somalia Diaspora via SMS

    by Melissa Ulbricht
    January 6, 2012

    In the Horn of Africa, Somalia makes headlines, but often only because of drought, famine, crisis and insecurity. Al Jazeera launched Somalia Speaks to help amplify stories from people and their everyday lives in the region — all via SMS.

    Somalia Speaks is a collaboration between Souktel, a Palestinian-based organization providing SMS messaging services, Ushahidi, Al Jazeera, Crowdflower, and the African Diaspora Institute. “We wanted to find out the perspective of normal Somali citizens to tell us how the crisis has affected them and the Somali diaspora,” Al Jazeera’s Soud Hyder said in an interview.

    Added Souktel’s Jacob Korenblum: “The notion was that when the food crisis erupted this summer, we wanted to get word out from the ground level as to what was going on in that region.”

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    The goal of Somalia Speaks is to aggregate unheard voices from inside the region as well as from the Somalia diaspora by asking via text message: How has the Somalia Conflict affected your life? Responses are translated into English and plotted on a map. Since the launch, approximately 3,000 SMS messages have been received. Here is just one example:

    I was born in the city of Wanlaweyn, and some of the people there are destroying things. I am poor now.

    For Al Jazeera, Somalia Speaks is also a chance to test innovative mobile approaches to citizen media and news gathering.

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    mobile makes sense

    The campaign involves sending thousands of text messages to citizens in the Horn of Africa. With this specific campaign, a mobile approach works.

    Souktel’s Korenblum said that in a five-year period leading up to 2009, mobile phone penetration jumped 1,600% in the Somali region; Souktel has been delivering service in the Horn of Africa since 2008 and has a member SMS subscriber list of over 50,000 people.

    There has also been considerable growth in the number of operators in the region, with new entrants almost every year. In some regions, there are as many as five mobile providers, Korenblum said. In terms of handset usage and mobile media, it’s overwhelmingly done via SMS. Reaching out to citizens via SMS, then, makes sense.

    SMS responses to the Al Jazeera question are sent to an Ushahidi and Crowdflower instance which enables filtering, translating and sorting of the content. These responses are then posted to the Somalia Speaks map on Al Jazeera for a larger international audience.

    Partnership is Key

    Somalia Speaks stems from earlier cooperation among the various partners. Souktel has had a long-standing relationship with both Ushahidi and Al Jazeera. The groups have worked together in the past on a campaign focused on events and citizen reporting from the Gaza Strip. “We all three found it was very successful in terms of giving ordinary citizens the ability to really have their voices heard, in a process which is usually reported on by news outlets and not much more than that,” Korenblum said. “It was a good way of democratizing the flow of information.”

    And they are back at it again in the Horn of Africa, where Souktel has for years operated large-scale mobile information services. Because of this, they have outreach and solid relationships with the mobile network operators in the three primary regions in the Horn of Africa. “Coming together on this campaign was a very natural thing for us to do,” Korenblum said.

    Each partner brings unique expertise and fulfills a specific role. Souktel facilitates the creation of the free local short-code for users across the different regions and mobile network operators. It also leveraged its 50,000-plus member SMS subscriber list to send the initial SMS messages.

    Ushahidi and Crowdflower work together to translate, categorize and geo-locate the incoming responses, which can be viewed here.

    Al Jazeera’s Hyder described the Ushahidi role as crisis mapping with a twist. “We are not mapping out a crisis but information that could provide more insight,” he said.

    “I think this a model for a good partnership between a media outlet, a mobile service provider, and mapping platforms,” Korenblum said. “I think it’s a decent use case for this sector on how different players in the social mobile landscape can come together to really help give a voice to communities.”

    A Pilot for Citizen Newsgathering

    Somalia Speaks is a pilot project. While the responses help amplify voices and stories of everyday life from an under-reported region, the project also provides editorial insight as to where Al Jazeera should focus in going forward with its citizen reporting efforts.

    “We are also looking at how to streamline news gathering workflows to get news directly from the people,” Hyder said. “It’s like taking citizen journalism to the next level.”

    Al Jazeera has received story tips and leads from Somalia Speaks participants. “We found out, for instance, there was a fire a week ago, and this was under-reported by all mainstream media,” Hyder said. “This gives us an easier way for sourcing and finding information.”

    Somalia Speaks is helping create a more optimal model for sources of information in the region. With the fire report, for example, an editorial team investigates and can follow up by using stringers or calling local telephone numbers in the area of the fire. Cynara Vetch, also with Al Jazeera, added that another positive thing about mapping and SMS is that volume can help with corroboration. “So many people submitted similar reports, unprompted,” she said. “This volume itself helps verify incidents.”

    The Somalian diaspora is getting involved, too. Hyder said that originally, the project was only going to focus on citizens within the region. “But there is a lot of input from the diaspora,” Hyder said — meaning that Somalians in the diaspora have valid arguments and points to add to the discussion. “Editorially, we had to open up the scope and see how the story grew,” Hyder said.

    There is an international number for anyone to send in a report (+45609910303) and people can also submit comments online in a section called “Diaspora Voices,” including video links, photo uploads, and text descriptions.

    The project itself is not without challenges. There is also a larger so what question as to the value of, and reaction to, such messages being mapped and posted. For more, read the complete case study here on the Mobile Media Toolkit.

    Tagged: al jazeera citizen media horn of africa mobile mobile media toolkit news SMS somalia

    One response to “Al Jazeera, Ushahidi Join in Project to Connect Somalia Diaspora via SMS”

    1. tarams says:

      There was retribution for “Somalia Speaks”. People reported by SMS but
      did not know their information was going back to the public on a
      website.

      Please help raise awareness of this so that we can get asylum for the victims.

      https://somaliaspeaks.crowdmap.com/reports/

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