State Media in Western Africa: State Controlled, Divided Press-Freedom Outcomes
Western Africa — Key findings
14 SMM-tracked countries · State Media Monitor 2026 · Regional analysis
SC · State-Controlled · CaPu · Captured Public / State-Managed · CaPr · Captured Private · IsPB · Independent Public-service Broadcasting. RSF 2026 category thresholds by score: Good 85-100 · Satisfactory 70-85 · Problematic 55-70 · Difficult 40-55 · Very Serious 0-40. Sources: State Media Matrix typology; RSF 2026 World Press Freedom Index.
Western Africa — Country ranking
14 countries · SC-dominant architecture across all of them · Ranked by RSF 2026 World Press Freedom Index (best to worst)
SMM Typology shows the typology categories present in each country’s profiled state-media outlets. “SC” = State-Controlled. “CaPu” = Captured Public / State-Managed. Two CaPu outlets were identified in this cycle: Senegal’s Société Sénégalaise de Presse et de Publications (SSPP, publisher of Le Soleil) and Mali’s Agence malienne de presse et de publicité (AMAP). Togo’s SC architecture is the largest profiled in the region, comprising five outlets: TVT, Radio Lomé, Radio Kara, Togo-Presse / EDITOGO and ATOP. No Independent Public-service Broadcasting (IsPB) or Captured Private (CaPr) outlets were identified anywhere in the region.
RSF 2026 categories assigned by score: Good 85–100 · Satisfactory 70–85 · Problematic 55–70 · Difficult 40–55 · Very Serious 0–40. Δ ’25 = change in RSF rank vs 2025 (+ = improved). All 14 scores RSF-verified.
Western Africa — Key indicators
14 SMM-tracked countries · State Media Monitor 2026
SC = State-Controlled. Two CaPu outlets identified in the cycle (Senegal SSPP / Le Soleil; Mali AMAP); the remaining profiled outlets are SC. Typology counts from State Media Monitor 2026 country profiles. RSF data from the 2026 World Press Freedom Index.
The fourteen Western African countries assessed in the State Media Monitor 2026 cycle (Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, The Gambia and Togo) together account for roughly 430 million people, a media ecosystem larger than the Middle Africa and Eastern Africa subregions combined. State-Controlled (SC) classification is the structural rule rather than the exception here: every reviewed country contains at least one SC outlet, and the great majority of profiled outlets sit in that tier of the State Media Matrix typology, the one in which public-media institutions are operated as government departments, ministerial directions sous tutelle or wholly state-owned corporations, without meaningful arm’s-length protection. The few exceptions are narrow rather than systemic. Senegal’s Société Sénégalaise de Presse et de Publications (SSPP, publisher of the daily Le Soleil) and Mali’s Agence malienne de presse et de publicité (AMAP) are classified Captured Public / State-Managed (CaPu) rather than SC, reflecting commercial-form structures that remain under state-aligned management. No Captured Private (CaPr) outlets and no Independent Public-service Broadcasting (IsPB) outlets were identified anywhere in the region during. The architectural model holds across language area: anglophone broadcaster-plus-news-agency pairings (Ghana’s GBC and GNA, Sierra Leone’s SLBC and SLENA, Liberia’s LBS), francophone services publics nationaux (Senegal’s RTS and APS, Côte d’Ivoire’s RTI and AIP), the lusophone Cape Verdean public-media duopoly (RTC and Inforpress), and Togo’s distinctive five-outlet configuration anchored by EDITOGO, which simultaneously publishes the Journal Officiel and the daily Togo-Presse.
Press-freedom outcomes are far less uniform than the typology. The Reporters Without Borders 2026 World Press Freedom Index places the region across a wide score spread, with all five RSF bands except “good” and “very serious” represented. Two countries reach the satisfactory band: Ghana, at 39th globally with a score of 72.20, and Cape Verde, at 40th with 71.98, together with South Africa and Namibia, the only four African countries in that band in 2026. Below them sit six “problematic” countries, The Gambia (46th, 69.42), Côte d’Ivoire (54th, 66.27), Liberia (58th, 64.54), Mauritania (61st, 63.36), Senegal (78th, 58.11) and Sierra Leone (79th, 57.06), and six “difficult” ones, Togo (97th, 52.56), Burkina Faso (110th, 48.52), Nigeria (112th, 48.11), Benin (113th, 47.39), Niger (120th, 46.02) and Mali (121st, 45.63). The region therefore divides almost evenly between the middle and lower bands, with the satisfactory tier the conspicuously thin slice. By contrast, Eastern Africa anchors five countries in the “very serious” basement; in Western Africa, none falls into that lowest category.
The cycle’s most pronounced sub-regional movement is the Sahel deterioration. Niger’s 37-place drop, from 83rd to 120th, is the steepest single-year fall recorded anywhere in the entire 2026 Index, a global outlier driven by the criminalisation of independent journalism under the post-2023-coup military authorities, including the arbitrary detention of at least five reporters and the systematic application of “false-information” and cybersecurity provisions against the press. Mali (121st, −2) and Burkina Faso (110th, −5) extended a downward trajectory dating to the 2020-2022 coup cycle, alongside parallel detentions and forced disappearances.
The most consequential finding cuts across the two datasets. No country in the region has produced, during this cycle, the combination of arm’s-length appointment process, ring-fenced public funding and operationalised editorial-governance mechanism that would meet the SMM threshold for an Independent Public-service Broadcasting (IP) classification. Several founding statutes contain formal independence or public-service language (Sierra Leone’s SLBC Corporation Act (2009), the Ghana Broadcasting Corporation framework, Liberia’s LBS Act, and other comparable instruments across the region) but those guarantees are routinely undercut in practice by executive control over senior appointments, weak enforcement of board-composition rules and budgetary dependence on the supervising ministry. That structural absence holds across regime type, language area and institutional legacy: the Sahel military-junta states, the post-transition anglophone democracies, the francophone constitutional republics, the lusophone Atlantic archipelago and the one-party-dominant West African systems all converge on the same SC architecture. Within that uniform institutional template, the press-freedom variation observed in the RSF data is what tells the story of the cycle, and the only departures from SC, in the form of the two CaPu outlets identified in Senegal and Mali, reflect specific commercial-form legacies rather than emerging structural pluralism.
Citation (cite the article/profile as part of):
Dragomir, M. (2025). State Media Monitor Global Dataset 2025.
Media and Journalism Research Center (MJRC).
Zenodo.
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17219015
This article/profile is part of the State Media Monitor Global Dataset 2025, a continuously updated dataset published by the Media and Journalism Research Center (MJRC).
