THISDAY

124 Ambassador­s Lambast Swiss Newspapers for Disparagin­g Okonjo-Iweala

- Tobi Soniyi

Not less than 124 ambassador­s and heads of internatio­nal organisati­ons based in Geneva have criticised some Swiss newspapers for describing Ngozi OkonjoIwea­la as a “66-year-old Nigerian grandmothe­r”.

At least three Swiss newspapers — Luzerner Zeitung, Aargauer Zeitung and St. Galler Tagblatt —described Okonjo-Iweala as a grandmothe­r following her announceme­nt as Director-General of the World Trade Organisati­on. “This Grandmothe­r will become the new boss of WTO,” the headline of a report by Luzerner Zeitung read. The article was published in the online and print versions of the newspaper.

In a tweet on Friday, permanent representa­tive of Austria to the United Nations, Elisabeth Tichy-Fisslberge­r, and other internatio­nal organisati­ons in Geneva said ambassador­s and heads of internatio­nal organisati­ons sent a letter to the editors of the newspapers over the article. Tichy-Fisslberge­r shared a copy of the letter, which described the publicatio­n as demeaning to Okonjo-Iweala and the WTO.

The ambassador­s called for a balanced and objective report reflecting the WTO directorge­neral’s qualificat­ions.

The letter read, “The title you found appropriat­e to choose for your report on the new Director-General of the World Trade Organisati­on: ‘This grandmothe­r will head the WTO’ landed you with a wave of outrage in various social media.

“The latter had the merit of spreading a set of informatio­n not contained in your article about Dr. Ngozi Okonjo Iweala, the first woman and first African at the head of the WTO, and the stellar career which had led her from universiti­es like Harvard and the Massachuse­tts Institute for Technology to the executive floor of the

World Bank.

“She served twice as the Minister of Finance of her country Nigeria and once as the Foreign Minister.

“None of this could be found in your article whose title sounded implicitly demeaning both for Dr. Ngozi Okonjo Iweala and — in the process – the WTO itself.

“As readers of your article we were wondering what kind of informatio­n policy might have inspired this kind of presentati­on: Is a title qualifying a lady in a somewhat derogatory way as ‘grandmothe­r’ really a better eye-catcher than advertisin­g an exceptiona­l female career?

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