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Puppets show up in Kenya

Posted on August 22nd 2009

A satirical puppet show developed and initiated by cartoonist Godfrey Mwampembwa has made it onto the airwaves in Kenya.


Governments the world over, never mind Africa, are known to squirm at satirical media. The ongoing complications in the screening of the Z News, a puppet show based on Zapiro’s political cartoons, is case in point in South Africa.

Nonetheless, a satirical puppet show has made it onto the airwaves in Kenya. Developed and initiated by cartoonist Godfrey Mwampembwa, alias Gado, the XYZ show challenges famous figures from Kenyan high society and politics using humour and satire.

Although freedom of the press is a constitutional right in Kenya, it is difficult for many journalists to practice their profession without interference. Gado and his team hope that XYZ will contribute positively to strengthening freedom of the press, and increasing political and social awareness among the people of Kenya.

Gado is one of the most popular and important cartoonists in Africa. He publishes a daily cartoon in The Nation, the largest newspaper in Kenya, and his work has been published in Le Monde, Washington Times, De Standaard and The Japan Times. Both Gado and Zapiro are Prince Claus laureates.

Financially supported by the Prince Claus Fund, the producers of XYZ hope it can serve as an example for other African countries.

Jonathan Shapiro

Born in Cape Town in 1958, political cartoonist and satirist Jonathan Shapiro was detained by security police in 1988, shortly before leaving on a Fulbright Scholarship to study media arts at the School of Visual Arts in New York.

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