
This article is written by Benjamin Pius (Publisher @ BMA) as part of the forthcoming Broadcasters Convention – East Africa, 26–28 May 2026, Nairobi, Kenya. Register and view the full programme →
Call it the “shadow tool” problem. Across African broadcast newsrooms, journalists and editors are quietly using AI to transcribe interviews, draft scripts, and version content for digital — on personal accounts, without enterprise agreements, without policy, and without anyone formally accountable for what gets published as a result. The floor has moved faster than the boardroom. And that gap is where the risk lives.
This was the defining tension at BMA’s webinar “Reworking Broadcast Newsroom Operations for the Age of AI” in March 2026, attended by editorial leaders and producers from across Africa and beyond and discussed by executives from the SABC, Associated Press, Arise News Nigeria, and Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC).
Nobody argued that AI adoption is the problem. The consensus was clear: adoption without governance is.
WHAT IS ALREADY HAPPENING
Zimbabwe’s Bulawayo-based digital outlet CITE has deployed AI news presenters — Alice and Vusi — for daily bulletins, cutting production time and drawing strong engagement from younger audiences. The technology is not arriving — it is already here, already in use, and in many newsrooms, already ungoverned.
“AI is a tool to enhance journalistic work — not a substitute for the institutional credibility broadcasters have built over decades.” — Abigail Javier, Multimedia Editor, Eyewitness News, South Africa.
THE CHALLENGE THAT MATTERS
The efficiency gains are genuine — faster output, multilingual versioning, 24-hour digital publishing without proportional headcount costs. But current AI tools struggle with African languages, local name pronunciation, and the cultural registers that make local journalism feel local.
A newsroom in Nairobi or Harare built on models trained entirely on Western anglophone data is not just cutting corners — it is producing journalism that does not sound like its community. The Media Council of Kenya has already called for AI tools that reflect African realities rather than wholesale importation of external assumptions.
The future is a hybrid newsroom: AI handling volume and speed, humans handling judgment, accountability, and on-the-ground reporting that no algorithm can replicate.
African broadcasters are arriving at this moment with a rare advantage — the mistakes of early, ungoverned adoption in the West are already visible.
The opportunity is to build automation into workflows with governance already in place. That requires leadership to own it, tools built for Africa, and an industry willing to share what it learns. The convention floor is exactly the right place to start.
This article is written by Benjamin Pius (Publisher @ BMA) as part of the forthcoming Broadcasters Convention – East Africa, 26–28 May 2026, Nairobi, Kenya. Register and view the full programme →












