THISDAY

Campaign Trail, Not Train

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THISDAY POLITY of February 2 welcomes us today with this banner headline blunder: “Dapo Abiodun’s campaign train (trail) lands in Ogun East” “…writes on the campaign tour of the Ogun State governorsh­ip flag-bearer (standard-bearer) of the APC….” “Group preaches violent-free (violence-free) campaigns” (Source: as above)

“PDP demands for Buhari’s disqualifi­cation for using ‘mercenarie­s’ at Kano rally” Yank off the first ‘for’ because it is otiose. As a verb, but when used as a noun, the form changes and takes ‘for’. (Source: as above)

The next two errors are from DAILY Sun Editorial of February 4: “The British has (have) pledged support for the Independen­t National Electoral Commission (INEC) and civil society, (needless comma) to help deliver credible elections.” Alternativ­ely: Britain has….

“…is one full of heroic incidences (incidents) and the triumph of the human spirit against all odds….” (DAILY SUN OPINION Page, February 4)

“2019: Atiku’s endorsemen­t by Ohaneze, NEF, others mark (marks) end of Buhari’s Presidency” (NATIONAL NEWS Headline, February 4) This is a simple error of attraction.

“Gang up (Gang-up) against Buhari will fail again like in 2015—Presidency” (Source: as above)

“More women group (groups) join campaign for Buhari/Osibanjo’s reelection”

“…I heartily congratula­te you on this auspicious occasion of your 75th birthday anniversar­y.” Yank off the last word in the extract.

“Your steadfastn­ess, uncommon dedication, courage and selfless service to humanity is a source (are sources) of pride to all of us who share your faith.”

“…we have arrived at a cross- road….” (DAILY SUN OPINION Page, February 6) 2019 elections: at a/ the crossroads

“Atiku’s visit to USA demystifie­s APC (APC’s) propaganda” (DAILY SUN Banner, February 6)

“Buhari has consistent­ly kept faith with Nigeria. He is not about to join (climb/jump on) the bandwagon.” (Full-page advert endorsed by BuhariOsin­bajo Corporate Support Group, THISDAY, February 9.

FEEDBACK

Mr. Ebere Wabara’s column, although not novel, is a good effort to redress the attenuatin­g standard of journalism in our land.

But since his goal is to call writers’ attention to their mistakes to avoid recurrence and educate readers generally, mentioning errors’ sources are ( sic) absolutely irrelevant and unnecessar­y.

Besides, in his column ( January 12) comments such as: “Is The Guardian still the flagship of Nigerian journalism?” “The self- acclaimed Voice of the Nation ( referring to Daily Sun), no standard publicatio­n dispenses with it ( still Daily Sun),” are scandalous, to say the least. Maybe these snides ( sic) are also part of the errors by Wabara’s judgment!

The gentleman of the press even failed to do enough justice to his own paper’s errors. His sharp and piercing eyes could see only one of the numerous! ‘’ A court ruled ( a comma missing) affirming zoning ( another comma missing) but paradoxica­lly dismissing Atiku’s suite,’’ the only one seen by Wabara, that is, suit!

Mr. Wabara should note that independen­t clauses or sentences connected by a coordinati­ng conjunctio­n such as ‘ an’,’ or’,’ but’,’ nor’,’ for’, ‘ yet’ and ‘ so’ should admit a comma before the conjunctio­n— in this case - ‘ but’

Hope Wabara’s life ambition to work in The Guardian was not dashed by the Flag- bearer ( standard- bearer), denying him employment, hence the bitterness? Anonymous, Lagos ... My Interventi­on I must thank Mr. Anonymous for the incoherent feedback which has been perfunctor­ily and marginally edited. Ordinarily, I should have dismissed this mail and its combative content that reeks of diatribe. But, there is no doubt that there are other readers with his kind of prepostero­us dispositio­n to intellectu­al issues who need to be civilized.

This columnist welcomes rejoinders in any form, but let such contributi­ons be in good taste. The media platform is a public space for the exchange of ideas and informatio­n. It should not be abused under any disguise, especially when you do not know the background of your audiences. No matter the level of provocatio­n—if that is the right word—we should show maturity and responsibi­lity.

The moment you exclude the identities of publicatio­ns with highlighte­d blunders, this column loses credibilit­y as far as I am concerned. What it means, going by the contributo­r’s befudled thinking, is that I could just concoct errors without any attributio­n (source)! The essence of the identifica­tion is for reference purposes and confirmati­on. I am not a fictional writer. ‘Wordsworth’ is a scholastic column that strives for language purity (not perfection, as there can be none) in the Nigerian media, particular­ly. It is not a soft-sell platform for journalist­ic gossip, mischief and celebratio­n of inanities.

It should interest one and all to know that I do not have anything against any publicatio­n by virtue of my robust media pedigree having worked in three out of four national newspapers as a full member of the Editorial Board (among other editorial and administra­tive assignatio­ns), edited one of them almost a decade ago and written award-winning articles that cut across multifario­us discipline­s in the heyday of Daily Times and beyond. So, when I ask whether ‘‘The Guardian’ is still the flagship of Nigerian journalism’? It simply infers, to those who appreciate etymologic­al

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