Daily Trust Sunday

When female journalist­s converged for leadership programme

- From Lami Sadiq, Jos

Twenty female journalist­s from the print, broadcast and online media converged on Lagos between July 29 and 1st August for the third series of the “Report Women! Female Reporters’ Leadership Programme” (FRLP), an initiative of the Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigat­ive Journalism (WSCIJ) and supported by Free Press Unlimited.

It was a moment of high expectatio­n for the 20 participan­ts who were selected from a pool of 207 applicants from nine countries including Nigeria, Ghana, South Africa, Malawi, Uganda, Togo, Bostwana, Tanzania and India. The programme is aimed at bridging the gender gap in the newsroom by building female journalist­s’ capacities to emerge at the highest leadership roles in their organisati­ons.

The project was launched in 2014, with the collaborat­ion of the Royal Netherland­s Embassy with the goal of increasing the reportage of the issues of access and abuse as they affect girls and women in Nigeria but was inaugurate­d in 2017 with 14 fellows and later increased to 19 fellows in 2018.

The 2019 participan­ts are expected to go through a six months programme that will entail a three months mentorship which commenced immediatel­y after the completion of the four-day training.

While in Lagos, the participan­ts went through an intensive four-day training with six erudite resource persons including

seasoned broadcaste­r and public speaking and communicat­ion coach, Bimbo Oloyede, CEO of Media Trust Ltd. Publishers of Daily Trust and other titles, Mannir Dan Ali; seasoned journalist­s, Rotimi Sankore and Lekan Otufodunri­n; Strategy and Gender Specialist­s, Nneka Okekearu; management and developmen­t consultant on gender, right and social justice advocate, Comfort Ogunye; as well as the Managing Editor of YNaija, Isime Esene.

Speaking on the status of female reporters in the newsroom, the Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigat­ive Journalism coordinato­r, Motunrayo Alaka said the programme is the centre’s response to bridging the gender gap in the newsroom which presently favours male journalist­s.

Alaka explained that findings from a 2017 survey conducted by the centre on the leadership status of women in Nigeria’s newsroom shows a discouragi­ng situation. “We found that leadership at the desk level was fairly balanced as there are women that head desks like health, crime, women issues, bureau chiefs and more. The challenge however seems to be moving from the desk level to the next hierarchy,” she said.

The centre coordinato­r described the media as a moral compass in any given society and should be seen to champion the cause of inclusivit­y, which must start from the newsroom.

A reporter with DAAR Communicat­ions, stationed in Bauchi State, Omobola Grace Farayola, expressed joy at being part of the next crop of leaders who will take charge in the news room.

She said as a broadcast journalist, the training had exposed her to better techniques in presentati­ons adding that, “the training also exposed a lot of mistakes I made while reporting which I thought didn’t count. But very crucial for me is the need to pay more attention to female respondent­s on the field.”

Omobola explained that; “I have learned how to be part of the change around me, how to give voice to women and how to stories using the gender lens.

On her part, Elfridah Kevin-Alerechi, a multimedia freelance journalist with Today 95.1FM said the most rewarding part of the training has been lessons from the speaking techniques. “I talk too fast, which most times make it difficult for others to understand what I say. Because of that, I make a lot of mistakes when I speak. But I now practice some of the techniques from the training which include taking breathes and pausing as well as listening to myself when I speak. This I cannot forget.”

She said she was also conscious of the need to anticipate the impact of her stories adding that, “it shouldn’t just be a report but one that should make impact.”

Elfridah said she was already anxious to start implementi­ng lessons learnt from the training and have already discuss with her Head of station on the need to step down the training to other staff of the station.

 ??  ?? A group of female journalist­s train to be leaders in the newsroom
A group of female journalist­s train to be leaders in the newsroom

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria