Daily Trust Sunday

The dangers of stereotypi­ng

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At our meeting of the Northern Media Forum last week, a member told us he was worried about the news media stereotypi­ng the Fulani as being responsibl­e in all cases of banditry and kidnapping in the North-West geopolitic­al zone. He said the Fulani too are victims of these crimes but that no one wants to believe that.

He raised an important point that I need to address here to underline the dangers of the easy resort to stereotypi­ng in the news media and the damage it does to inter-ethnic and individual relationsh­ips. The routine reportage of kidnapping and banditry in the northweste­rn geopolitic­al zone names the Fulani as the untouchabl­e perpetrato­rs of these crimes. It is not difficult to see that it has unfortunat­e consequenc­es for the Fulani as citizens and in their relationsh­ip with other ethnic groups in the country.

Sad to say, stereotypi­ng is an old human problem. We stereotype those who are different from us. It is an affliction in all societies where men and women freely pass judgments on the attitude and the behaviour of their fellow human beings. The news media take delight in inventing stereotypi­ng as a means of painting verbal pictures that lend some credence to particular cases of reportage. Stereotypi­ng is a negative portrayal of racial, ethnic, religious, other groups and individual­s. We use stereotypi­ng to pin labels on those who are different from us or who are doing things that we do not approve of. The Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary describes it as “beliefs or judgments about people based on fixed ideas about them which are often not true.”

Stereotypi­ng is dangerous in all human relations – intra- and inter. It creates a gulf between groups and individual­s and forces the stereotype­r to see the stereotype­d only through the dark prism of his nurtured prejudice. A mild form of it is labelling by which individual­s are given additional means of identifica­tion. But labels are mostly positive, e.g. no one who is labelled a radical objects to the label because it portrays him as essentiall­y and positively different from another man labelled a conservati­ve.

On the other hand, there is nothing funny about ethnic stereotypi­ng. In indulging in ethnic or racial stereotypi­ng, we force other people to become victims of our prejudices built on our lack or poor understand­ing of them. Generation­s of editors have sought to free the news media from the easy resort to stereotypi­ng with very little success. Richard Harwood, as the ombudsman for the Washington Post, was once so worried about this that he advised the editors and the reporters of the venerable American newspaper to handle stereotypi­ng with care because “the habit of thinking in terms of stereotype­s, of equating the labels we put on people with the people themselves, is a bad business. To be a ‘Jew in Germany in the 1930s and 1940s was to be a criminal. The women and children killed at Mylai were not ‘people,” Lt William Caley said, they were ‘the enemies.’ A policeman, the Black Panther newspaper tiresomely reminds us, is not a ‘person’ but a pig. If we decide that the only ‘newsworthy’ facts about black people are facts about crime, public welfare and revolution­ary rhetoric, we create a stereotype and deny the diversity of 20 million people.”

In stereotypi­ng the Fulani as the main perpetrato­rs of the forementio­ned crimes and security challenges in the country, we deny them our understand­ing and sympathy and refuse to accept that possibilit­y that some of them too are victims of these criminal elements among them. We now know that in some parts of Katsina State, the Fulani cannot openly graze their cattle or safely go to the local markets. They face attacks and the rustling of their cattle. Some of them are in the same boat with the rest of us. Still, as an ethnic group, they are uniformly blamed in all cases of killings, kidnapping, banditry and attacks on farmers and travellers in parts of the country.

Stereotypi­ng is actually weaponized when a nation finds itself going through rough economic, social and political difficulti­es such as we face in our country right now. It searches for some scapegoats, someone or a group of people that must carry the watering can for a variety of reasons. Stereotypi­ng makes it easy for us to identify such scapegoats.

In the early period of the darkening insecurity situation in the country, Fulani herdsmen were identified as the killer group in attacks on farmers and communitie­s in the NorthCentr­al geopolitic­al zone. Thus, Samuel Ortom, governor of Benue State, finds it easy to blame Fulani herdsmen in all cases of killings in the state. He has successful­ly parlayed this into a personal political fortune.

This column is not intended to exonerate the Fulani in all the criminal cases for which they are rightly or wrong blamed. That is beyond me. But it seems to me that in focusing solely on the Fulani, we close our minds to the possibilit­y of the involvemen­t of other ethnic groups in the aforesaid crimes in the country. Criminalit­y is easily franchised. Stereotypi­ng closes that door – and we are none the wiser for it. As the Forum member pointed out, members of Boko Haram are mostly Kanuri but they do not suffer the same public prejudice and stereotypi­ng as the Fulani. He wondered why; so do I.

There is something somehow similar between hate speech and stereotypi­ng. Both are products of personal and group jaundice and the human tendency to separate us from them. Stereotypi­ng precedes hate speech. Both are intended to achieve the same objective of legitimisi­ng hate and create a gulf between us and them.

In my book, Style: A Guide to Good Writing, I decreed these five commandmen­ts:

• Don’t perpetuate stereotype­s

• Labels and stereotype­s create false images of people

• Labels and stereotype­s interfere with the profession­al objectivit­y of the reporter

• Don’t stereotype individual­s and groups of people. The stereotypi­cal label you pin on them often determines how you report them and how the rest of the society reacts to them.

• Labelling and stereotypi­ng don’t necessaril­y help your readers nor do they convey your informatio­n better in any shape or form.

We cannot get rid of labels and stereotype­s but we need not make them articles of faith in dischargin­g our profession­al obligation to correctly inform and educate our readers and listeners.

Stereotypi­ng is dangerous in all human relations – intra- and inter. It creates a gulf between groups and individual­s and forces the stereotype­r to see the stereotype­d only through the dark prism of his nurtured prejudice. A mild form of it is labelling by which individual­s are given additional means of identifica­tion.

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