Daily Trust Sunday

I cannot tell the Trust story like its founders; however I’m happy to be a witness to history, the possibilit­ies in dreams, and how they (dreams) can be nurtured to fruition and maturity

- Zainab Suleiman Okino is Editor-inChief of Blueprint Newspaper Our regular columnist Olumhense return next week Sonala

already complainin­g that I was taking my luck too far by not going on leave, I was in labour at the time I left the editorial board meeting to Maitama General Hospital, only for me to call them about an hour later to break the news of the birth of my son. Similar sacrifices were made by many of my colleagues, who during the Kaduna crisis of year 2000, braved all odds to come to the office to produce the paper.

Twenty years after, the Trust brand, its impact and influence in the Nigerian media space, are testaments to qualities mentioned above in addition to adherence to ethical Going by the dictum, that journalism should be on the side of the people and comfort the weak against the establishm­ent, we always reminded ourselves of our corporate social responsibi­lity, to do investigat­ive and exclusive stories such that it could expose corruption, take communitie­s out of the woods by drawing government’s attention to their negligence and of course educate and enlighten the people standards, profession­alism and innovation in both the business and editorial sides of the newspaper. Moreover, for a paper that sprouted from a region (North) considered not newspaper-friendly and without the capacity to nurture such to profitabil­ity, to have cruised to the highest altitude in only 20 years; the Trust people, its ambassador­s (like me, for that is what all ex staff should be), friends and readers are justified in their celebratio­n of this shining Northern star, now competing advantageo­usly on news stands across the country.

I cannot tell the Trust story like its founders; however I’m happy to be a witness to history, the possibilit­ies in dreams, and how they (dreams) can be nurtured to fruition and maturity. Starting from a small office in a business neighbourh­ood surrounded by shops, in Kaduna, the truth is that Trust was not given any chance of survival, but for a few decisive actions. Above and beyond, constant innovation­s, beautiful layout and conceptual­isation of profitable ideas, the paper survived the initial shock and has prospered; a prosperity engendered by a crop of dedicated staff, determinat­ion not to fall into the traps of such failed projects in the industry and lessons learnt therefrom. The paper also seized the opportunit­y of a vacuum created by the non-existence of an independen­t newspaper at a time the Abacha junta reigned; and of course, the willpower to hold those in power to account. It was followed by recognitio­n that here was a northern paper willing and profession­ally ready to tell truth to power, even to a so-called ‘brother’ at the top. It soon followed that the vast majority of people, especially the political class, saw in Trust a paper for the ventilatio­n of their views for or against the military regime at the time.

Going by the dictum, that journalism should be on the side of the people and comfort the weak against the establishm­ent, we always reminded ourselves of our corporate social responsibi­lity, to do investigat­ive and exclusive stories such that it could expose corruption, take communitie­s out of the woods by drawing government’s attention to their negligence and of course educate and enlighten the people.

Finally, there is a saying that if your survival does not depend on a business, there is the likelihood of treating the business with levity. For most of the management and pioneer staff of Trust, their (and our) survival depended on the success of the company. Bearing this in mind, we all worked hard first to earn a living and second to make profit, and finally to prove the point that with good management, the media can actually thrive in the North. Therefore, for the Trust family and its larger community, what started as a passion and business concern became a redeeming metaphor for the North’s capacity to own and manage a successful media outfit.

I congratula­te Trust for this milestone, and hope for more trail-blazing media ventures from the stable of Media Trust.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria