|
I was supposed to help Kevin learn about training
during his week in Omaha. I can’t imagine
that he learned as much from me as I learned from
him.
John Ogen Kevin Aliro, then the editor of The
Monitor, was visiting the Omaha World-Herald for
a week in 2003 as part of his Foster Davis Fellowship
at the Poynter Institute.
 |
| ABOVE: Kevin's children,
Susan Akech (Tiny), Joan Athieno (Jojo), Frank
Kisakye and Ian Ortega. |
Kevin was interested in training and I did a
lot of training, so Paul Pohlman of Poynter asked
me if I would host his visit to a U.S. newsroom.
When you meet a colleague from another country,
you ask a lot of questions. Kevin’s answers
amazed me. He told of experiences as a war correspondent
in Rwanda and Congo. He told of the fight for
press freedom in a country where [former president]
Idi Amin had exiled or exterminated virtually
all journalists.
Kevin was leading efforts to develop the free
press in the post-Amin Uganda. Even now, the government
isn’t sure how much it wants a free press.
Kevin told of restrictions on what he could report
from Congo and how he tried to hint at the facts
in his stories about Ugandan troops in the war
there. He told of angering the government so much
that the paper’s computers were seized and
the paper was shut down for a week or so. He told
about having an arm broken in an assault after
a story the government didn’t like.
 |
| Kevin's widow, Elizabeth
Birabwa lays a wreath on her late husband's
casket. |
He didn’t tell the stories boastfully,
just gave matter-of-fact answers to our questions.
I didn’t fully appreciate how much Kevin
meant to Uganda until I took him to visit an Omaha
operation called Computers for Africa, which rehabbed
used computers and sent them to Uganda and a couple
other African countries.
The program was run by a Jesuit high school and
the leaders of the computer project brought in
a Jesuit missionary who was home from Uganda on
furlough.
The missionary immediately recognised Kevin’s
name. “You’re Kevin Aliro?”
he asked. “Do you think they’ll let
you back into the country?”
Kevin went back to his country, where journalism
education and training were just starting to recover
from the years with no press freedom. He desperately
wanted to give Uganda’s journalists the
kind of training opportunities he had seen in
the United States. Before he left Omaha, he was
talking about bringing me to Uganda to train journalists
at The Monitor.
After his return to Uganda, Kevin left The Monitor
and started another newspaper, The Weekly Observer.
As busy as he became in that project, he did not
forget his passion for training Ugandan journalists.
He sent me an e-mail proposal for a journalism
training institute in Uganda. He wanted to name
it after Richard Tebere, a pioneer of Uganda’s
free press.
Together we polished the proposal and I tried
to interest some organisations in joining us to
seek a grant to start the institute. I’m
embarrassed at how weak my efforts were. For Kevin,
it was a passion. For me, it was one of several
balls I was trying to keep aloft.
Kevin pressed me to help him provide training
for journalists in Uganda. I connected him with
a friend, Ken Freed, who was retired and had worked
overseas extensively as a foreign correspondent
for the Los Angeles Times.
Ken went to Kampala for a few months to help
Kevin train his staff at The Weekly Observer.
The Tebere Institute proposal was on my someday
list when I came to API. I had other higher priorities
to address first, but I hoped to pursue it someday
as an API project.
On September 29, I received a message from Kevin
that gave me hope that API would have an opportunity
to help him. He understood that the U.S. Embassy
in Kampala might be able to support bringing a
U.S. journalist to Uganda to work as an editor
at The Weekly Observer and help with training
the staff for six months. I messaged some friends
and found several who would be willing to help,
some for a month or two, some for the full six
months.
I messaged Kevin that I had plenty of volunteers
to choose from and would contact the embassy about
how to seek funding. An auto-reply message informed
me that Kevin had been hospitalised. He first
entered the hospital, complaining of headaches,
on October 4, just five days after he had written
to me.
Last week I connected with the U.S. embassy and
the public affairs officer there said she had
no funding for the program I described. I’m
not sure whether Kevin was mistaken or whether
he was merely hopeful of persuading the embassy
or someone to fund the program. I do know he was
a tremendously optimistic and persuasive person.
I tend to believe he would have found a way.
I messaged him again, telling him of the response
from the embassy. Again, I received an auto-reply
saying that he was in hospital.
I learned this weekend that Kevin died Saturday.
Obituaries in The Weekly Observer and The Monitor
describe what an important journalist he was in
his homeland.
He was an inspiration as well to this journalist
who has not yet made it to Uganda. And deeply
regrets that.
The author is the director of tailored programmes
at the American Press Institute (API). This article
was posted on the API website.
sbuttry@americanpressinstitute.org
RELATED STORIES
• Adieu,
dear Kevin
• Kevin:
what a loss!
• A
friend I will never meet
• Observer,
friends, media fraternity mourn Kevin
• Kevin
spirit will live on
• Tears
for a fallen friend
|