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Anton Harber

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I don't know how it happened in the rest of the  world, but I can tell you about one small place. It is called Diepsloot,  a volatile informal settlement on the edge of Johannesburg where I have  been spending some time. Here it all began with a couple of people who  started a small radio station which gave voice to the 200 000 forgotten  people of the shanties, and gave them a way to be heard that did not  involve violence. At first they used the radio to talk to each other,  then they used it to talk to the politicians, and call them to explain  themselves.  They started using mobile phones to alert people to events,  and let them talk on the radio. And they started doing investigative  journalism: where are the houses, and the taps, and the clinics, they  asked. Then they used it to organise themselves ...

Anton Harber

(whose book, Diepsloot, is due to be published in May)

Photo by Alon Skuy
Photo by Alon Skuy

Postcard image info

Photo by Alon Skuy


Author: Anton Harber

Anton Harber

<p>Anton Harber is the Caxton Professor of Journalism and Media Studies and director of the Journalism Programme at the <a href="http://www.wits.ac.za/">University of the Witwatersrand </a>in Johannes

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