THISDAY

Its Good Governance, Stupid

- MOHAMMEDHA­RUNA GUEST COLUMNIST

Being a paper at the Media Roundtable on “The Accountabi­lity Imperative: Why and How to Hold the Politician­s’ Feet to Fire” organized by FrontFoot Media Initiative, Lagos, at Bon Hotel, Ikeja, on November 19, 2022.

Section 22 of the Constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999, imposes an obligation on the media to hold Government accountabl­e to Nigerians. “The press, radio, television and other agencies of the mass media,” the section says, “shall at all times be free to uphold the fundamenta­l objectives contained in this Chapter and uphold the responsibi­lity and accountabi­lity of the Government to the people.”

The Chapter in reference is Chapter II and it is titled “Fundamenta­l Objectives and Directive Principles of State Policy”. It is in twelve Sections, beginning with Section 13 of the Constituti­on and ending in Section 24. The Chapter says the country shall be a State based on the principle of democracy and social justice. It lists a number of fundamenta­l objectives for the State, including political, economic, social, educationa­l, environmen­tal, cultural and foreign objectives. It also says the nation’s ethics shall be “discipline, integrity, dignity of labour, social justice, religious tolerance, self-reliance and patriotism”. Last, but not the least, it imposes a number of duties on the country’s citizens, including abiding by the provisions of its constituti­on, respecting the dignity, rights and legitimate interests of others and declaring income honestly to appropriat­e and lawful agencies and paying tax promptly.

My initial thought on reading my topic was that I should talk about why and how the Media should hold the politician accountabl­e to the public. However, on second thoughts it occurred to me that this responsibi­lity should go beyond the Media alone as enunciated in the Constituti­on. Instead, it should be everybody’s concern.

Even then, the Media as the Fourth Estate of the Realm, must lead the way, if only because together as print, radio, television and the internet it is the main source of news and informatio­n in society.

While it is important that the Media and the rest of society hold politician­s accountabl­e to the rest of society, politician­s are not the only ones that should be held accountabl­e to society. Beyond politician­s, every group in society should be held accountabl­e to its society. After all it is not politician­s alone who are saddled with the responsibi­lity for making decisions on behalf of society. Big Business, Big Labour, Big Pharma, and, of course, Big Media, etc., all of them make decisions that affect people. Therefore, we must go beyond the Constituti­onal enunciatio­ns for the Media to hold Government accountabl­e to the public and hold every institutio­n whose decisions and actions have impact on people and society to account for their decisions and actions.

As the leader in holding, not just politician­s, but all other groups, accountabl­e to the people, the Media must be guided by knowledge, ethics (integrity, courage, profession­alism, impartiali­ty, etc.) and civility in language, if only because intemperat­e language, generally speaking, but name calling and stereotypi­ng, more specifical­ly, tends to alienate rather than engage.

The first step the Media must take in holding politician­s accountabl­e to the public is to be knowledgea­ble about politics and, of course, everything else it reports. This should start with being knowledgea­ble about the rules that guide our politics.

The most important of these rules is the country’s Constituti­on, especially since the Constituti­on says the only legitimate form of government is the elected one. The second is our new Electoral Act 2022.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria