Madagascar accused of smearing Pulitzer-winning reporter for famine expose

Reporters Without Borders on Thursday denounced a “smear campaign” by the authorities in Madagascar against a journalist who works for several international media. Gaelle Borgia, a Pulitzer Prize winner for an investigation into Russian interference in the 2018 Malagasy presidential election, “is the subject of a campaign designed to discredit her”,…

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) on Thursday denounced a “smear campaign” by the authorities in Madagascar against a journalist who works for several international media.

Gaelle Borgia, a Pulitzer Prize winner for an investigation into Russian interference in the 2018 Malagasy presidential election, “is the subject of a campaign designed to discredit her”, according to a statement from the NGO on Thursday.

In a video posted on Facebook on June 21, the journalist showed people hit by devastating famine in the south of the island eating scraps of leather from zebu skin, normally used to make sandals.

In a statement days later, local authorities accused her of “spreading false information”, “insulting the local culture” and using the misfortune of the people “to try to shine publicly”.

State broadcaster TVM then featured the same people Borgia interviewed, only this time they said that they had been paid by the journalist to eat leather.

Borgia denied the accusation and went back to interview the people again. On camera, they told her they had been threatened by armed men wielding a knife and paid to make statements against her.

“We denounce in the strongest possible terms the crude and mendacious attempts to discredit the work of this journalist,” RSF said.

Pressure, intimidation and threats against journalists have recently increased on the island, especially around issues such as Covid, RSF said. Madagascar has fallen three places in the world press freedom index published by RSF, and is now ranked 57th out of 180 countries.

© Agence France-Presse