Sunday, 20 September 2015-Popular
columnist, Njoki Chege, has narrated how she was mistreated at Westgate Mall,
where she had been sent by her boss for an assignment.
Read how she was humiliated in broad-daylight.
It is Thursday afternoon and
I have spent the past one hour being treated like a terrorist at the
newly-opened Westgate Mall.
No, I didn’t leave a backpack
unattended at ArtCaffe. I was just doing my job as a journalist.
You see, my editor assigned
me a story that is to appear in the Westgate memorial pullout to be published
next week.
I was to interview business
people and vendors at Westgate, to tell the country that business at Westgate
is back to normal. It was basically free publicity for the premier shopping
mall.
Only that Westgate Management
and, specifically the Public Relations Officer, did not see it that way.
The photographer and I
followed protocol. We respectfully reported to the Westgate Management Office
to declare our intentions.
We asked the receptionist to
allow us to speak to the Public Relations Officer (PRO).
She punched the landline
phone and seconds later, she told us that the PRO says that if we wanted a
story, we must first email a request to this effect and then wait for a
response.
“Can we see her?” I asked.
“Write mail,” I was told.
NEWSROOM DYNAMICS
That is such a 2002 way of
doing journalism and PR, a fast-paced world governed by tight deadlines.
I would expect that the PRO,
of all people, understands newsroom dynamics.
What pissed me off was that
the PRO was at the reception seconds after we entered, she saw us but still had
to tell the receptionist to tell us to write emails.
Too busy to talk
Now, any journalist will tell
you that any source that asks you to write an email first but does not want to
talk to you face to face has no intention whatsoever to assist you get your
story in the near future.
We, therefore, defiantly went
back into the mall, talked to a few traders who told us how business has failed
to pick up, took their photos and started to leave.
Security stopped us. They
shooed us into the management office and alas, whom do we find there? The PRO
who was too busy to talk to us in the first place.
“Delete those photos!” she
thundered at us, without even trying to find out what our story was about.
She didn’t even bother to
look at the photos we had taken. She didn’t even bother to make sure the photos
we were deleting were the ones we had taken of the mall.
In a bid to intimidate us,
about five burly security officers were called in. They surrounded us, stroking
their outdated radios perched on their shoulders and giving us the ‘look’.
SECURITY PURPOSES
So far, nobody – not even
security – asked to see what photos we had taken, but they claimed that nobody
was allowed to take photos ‘for security purposes’.
So what security were they
talking about if nobody bothered to even ask to see the photos we had taken?
The PR lady told us: “Media
is not allowed to take photos here. Not even international media!”
Not even international media?
Does that mean that if they were to allow media to take photos of Westgate,
that international media would be given preference? Does that mean that
international media is more important than local media?
I will tell you the truth
about Westgate. The mall is practically empty. A good number of shops have not
yet been opened.
At lunchtime, the popular
ArtCaffe has only about four customers nursing a single milkshake each and the
vendors who sell curios make very little in a day. The parking is literally
empty and Nakumatt tellers are not busy.
Westgate needs all the
support it can garner from Kenyans, only the management is too blind to see
that.
The Westgate Management Office
and especially its PR arm is a perfect example of how NOT to revive a mall.
If you are a local journalist
hoping to play your part as a Kenyan to do a positive story about Westgate,
forget it, unless you want to be treated like a terrorist. Or wait until CNN
comes and does another ‘hotbed’ story.
Finally, dear PRO, you are a
public relations officer!
VICTORY AGAINST
TERRORISTS
The buzzword is public. You
deal with people; from journalists to irate shoppers.
Refusing to see us and
leaving us in the hands of a receptionist who can barely speak English, is
nowhere near what is expected in the world of PR.
PR is not about balloons and
high heels; it is about getting your brand out there, in the shiniest,
strongest form there can ever be.
We deleted our pictures and
you threatened to sue us in case we used any photos of Westgate, including the
file photos in our system that were taken the day President Uhuru Kenyatta
re-opened the mall.
Please, darling, get a crash
course in media law.
Also, did you know that there
is a special software you can use to retrieve deleted photos from a memory
card?
I just want the Westgate
management and specifically its PR department to clean up their act and market
that beautiful mall as a monument of Kenya’s victory against terrorists.
You are sitting on a goldmine
and you don’t even know it.
You can make Westgate the next Maasai Mara by showing the
world that you have risen above the terrorists and that you remain unbowed.
International media like such stories, for your information.
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