
Understanding Media Law in Kenya: What Every Delight Journalism Graduate Must Know
By Delight Technical College | School of Media & AI — Digital Journalism | 2026
Journalism in Kenya operates within a complex legal framework, one that creates both protections for journalists and significant legal risks. A journalist who does not understand Kenya’s media law is not just professionally disadvantaged, they are legally vulnerable. Delight Technical College’s Digital Journalism programme ensures that every graduate has a solid understanding of the legal landscape in which they will work, the specific risks they face, and the protections available to them.
⚖️ The Key Laws Governing Kenyan Journalism
The Constitution of Kenya 2010:
Kenya’s constitution provides the foundational legal protection for journalism through Article 33 (Freedom of Expression) and Article 34 (Freedom of the Media). These constitutional provisions are powerful but they are not absolute. Expression that amounts to war propaganda, hate speech, or incitement to violence is not constitutionally protected.
The Kenya Information and Communications Act (KICA):
The primary legislation governing electronic communications in Kenya including online media, social media, and digital content. Journalists working in digital media must understand how KICA applies to their work.
The Computer Misuse and Cybercrimes Act 2018:
Legislation that criminalises a range of online activities including the publication of false information, cyberbullying, and interception of communications. Journalists working online need to understand how this law might apply to their reporting.
The Defamation Act:
The law governing false statements that damage the reputation of individuals or organisations. Defamation is one of the most significant legal risks facing journalists and understanding how to minimise defamation risk is essential professional knowledge.
The Access to Information Act 2016:
Legislation that gives citizens and journalists the right to request information held by public bodies. Understanding how to use this law is a core investigative journalism skill.
The Media Council Act 2013:
Established the Media Council of Kenya as the independent regulator of media standards and ethical conduct. Understanding the Council’s role, its complaints process, and its relationship with the legal system is important professional knowledge.
🔐 Defamation- Understanding the Risk
What Is Defamation?
Defamation is the publication of a false statement of fact that damages the reputation of a person or organisation. In Kenya, defamation can be:
- Libel- defamation in written, broadcast, or digital form
- Slander- defamation in spoken form
The Elements of Defamation:
- The statement must be false- truth is an absolute defence to defamation
- The statement must be published- communicated to at least one person other than the subject
- The statement must identify the subject- either by name or by description
- The statement must damage reputation- cause others to think less of the subject
Defences Against Defamation Claims:
- Truth- if the statement is true, it cannot be defamatory
- Fair comment- honest opinion on a matter of public interest
- Privilege- statements made in certain contexts (parliament, court) are protected
- Public interest- statements made responsibly about matters of genuine public concern
📱 Digital and Social Media Legal Issues
- Publishing on social media carries the same legal obligations as publishing in print or broadcast
- Sharing or retweeting defamatory content can make the sharer liable
- Online content is permanent and searchable- historical posts can generate legal action years later
- User-generated content on a platform you manage can create editorial liability.
🛡️ Source Protection- Legal Dimensions
The protection of confidential sources is both an ethical obligation and, in some circumstances, a legal right. Kenyan law recognises the principle of journalistic privilege but this protection is not absolute, and journalists may face court orders to reveal sources in certain circumstances.
“A journalist who does not know the law is a journalist whose career is one mistake away from ending. At Delight, we make sure our journalism graduates are legally literate because legal knowledge protects both them and the journalism they produce.”
📍 Delight Technical College | Muindi Mbingu Street, Opposite Jevanjee Gardens, Nairobi | +254 722 533 771 | www.delight.ac.ke



