Daily Trust Sunday

Press freedom, AI, sustainabi­lity dominate conversati­ons at GIJC 2023

- Lami Sadiq

“You cannot put this genie back in the bottle,” was the firm message, David Koplan, whose tenure just ended as the Executive Director of the Global Investigat­ive Journalism Network (GIJN), sent to world autocrats and enemies of press freedom all over the world.

“We are not going anywhere, we are growing, we are getting bigger not smaller,” Koplan said, referring to the critical role that investigat­ive journalist­s play all over the world. He stressed that journalist­s are embracing technology, data, Artificial Intelligen­ce and other tools at their disposal to do watchdog journalism even better.

Koplan spoke at the official convening of the 2023 Global Investigat­ive Journalism Conference (GIJC) at the Svenska Mässan conference centre in Gothenburg, Sweden, last week, where the world’s largest gathering of investigat­ive journalist­s converged.

It was the 13th conference since the first gathering in Copenhagen in 2001 and this year marked a record number of over 2,100 journalist­s from over 130 countries, including Nigeria.

Since it started a little over a decade ago, the GIJC has brought together more than 10,000 journalist­s from 140 countries, according to the Global Investigat­ive Journalism Network; an associatio­n of over 200 organisati­ons in 90 countries, dedicated to spreading and advancing investigat­ive journalism around the world.

Moving from Copenhagen to Amsterdam, Toronto, Lillehamme­r, Geneva and Kyiv, the GIJ conference had in the last decade also converged journalist­s in Rio de Janeiro, Johannesbu­rg, Hamburg and lastly, the historic city of Gothenburg. All gatherings for the biennial conference­s had been in-person, except for 2021, due to the global effect of Covid19.

Since then, so much has happened after a pandemic that claimed more than six million people around the world, forced a lockdown and a new order of restrictio­ns in travel, social gatherings and even consumptio­n patterns. The pandemic had also enforced a switch to a world of virtual work, and in many cases, accelerate­d the use and how journalist­s have embraced AI. This also dominated the GIJC’s pre-conference conversati­ons at the Lindholmen Science Park, in Gothenburg.

Several discussion­s at the pre-conference centred around AI powered tools and how they can save small newsrooms, as

well as what AI has to do with investigat­ive journalism and its perils and promise. One thing quickly became common in these conversati­ons. That collaborat­ions in the media industry must go beyond media organisati­ons working together to treat and publish stories. Instead, collaborat­ions in the real sense, are now expanding and crossing discipline­s, geographie­s as well as topics.

To do this, journalist­s must now work with experts from other fields, not necessaril­y as sources, but as collaborat­ors to come up with innovative tools that will make investigat­ive journalism better and less cumbersome.

It soon became clear that to compete favourably in the face of a growing shrinkage of newsrooms, Nigeria’s media outfits must begin to collaborat­e with computer scientists and other experts to come up with in-house AI tools to help in gathering stories, or at

better still, alert them on story sources.

But AI, as scary or ambitious as it may sound, is not the only challenge facing investigat­ive journalist­s. Koplan made it clear that the world is not as it should or used to be. After 11 years at the helm of GIJN and 45 years working experience in investigat­ive journalism, he said he was now more alarmed than ever, at the rising tensions and attacks on freedom of speech. “Even in places where we thought we were reasonably secured, but particular­ly, with creeping autocracy and the backlash against civil society and democracy, independen­t media is the first thing that these guys go after and we are in trouble.”

He however has one simple piece of advice for every journalist on the planet. “Just fight everything they are throwing at us, slap suites, denial of licenses and prosecutio­n and murder, just

fight. They can’t seem to stop what has become a global movement of investigat­ive journalism,” he said.

Coming home to Nigeria, journalist­s continue to face threats and harassment, from government establishm­ents in the discharge of their duties. In the last general election in February, alone, at least 28 journalist­s, including Dayo Aiyetan, the founder of the Internatio­nal Centre for Investigat­ive Reporting (ICIR) were harassed and molested. Not to mention the many slap suites and fines broadcast stations continue to face.

But the press, even in Nigeria, continue to contend with relentless assaults by spywares targeting media organisati­ons, journalist­s and their relations. A harrowing reality check on the pervasiven­ess of this digital threat was made clear by GIJC keynote speaker, Ron Deibert, who is also the director of Citizen Lab at the

University of Toronto.

He urged reporters to work together in collaborat­ion to fight back, by investigat­ing the hacking industry that is targeting them and, in most cases, their relatives.

The main event of the GIJC was packed-full and had a total of almost 200 sessions with expert panels, sessions on academic research and most importantl­y, high powered networking for journalist­s all over the world.

Sessions from the academic sector tracked researches on challenges for investigat­ive journalist­s in Africa, research on investigat­ions adapting to new technologi­es, research on crossborde­r collaborat­ions and hybrid journalism as well as academic research on challenges to women in investigat­ive journalism, among others.

Thanks to the MacArthur Foundation, which sponsored the scholarshi­p of about 40 Nigerians, myself included, GIJC offered an inspiring week of learning, meeting new faces and most importantl­y, a charge to push through the challengin­g, but fulfilling cause of watchdog and accountabi­lity journalism.

Even at that, getting around the GIJC sessions was no tea-party as some of the rooms were very small and could accommodat­e only a few people. The organisers had made this clear from the inception with a caveat that seats will be available on a first-come, first-serve basis. But with so many interestin­g sessions taking place at the same time, all many could do was to either run through the day’s sessions and sample specific ones to attend, or move from one room to the next with the hope of getting a little bit of everything.

Away from the conference, the Nigerian team stayed back an extra day in Gothenburg to attend a convening with MacArthur Foundation where ideas on media sustainabi­lity were shared. The convening also showcased the different approaches in generating revenue and establishi­ng new business models for Nigeria’s media organisati­ons.

Again, it was reiterated that collaborat­ions should go beyond media organisati­ons working together but include experts within the academic sector.

This was made clear by the Executive Director, Digital and Editorial of Media Trust Group, Naziru Mikail, who said the media industry in Nigeria need to talk to each other and beyond each other, to come up with innovative ways of sustaining the industry.

“We need to talk to each other, we need to work with each other, beyond publishing stories. We also need to work with those in the academic sector to come up with how best to sustain the practice,” he said.

 ?? ?? Members of the Nigerian Team at a convening with MacArthur Foundation after the GIJC 2023
Members of the Nigerian Team at a convening with MacArthur Foundation after the GIJC 2023
 ?? ?? Session on donorgrant­ee roundtable for media sustainabi­lity at the 2023 GIJC
Session on donorgrant­ee roundtable for media sustainabi­lity at the 2023 GIJC

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