Daily Trust

National integratio­n: Media profession­als charged on integrity, ethics

- From Clement A. Oloyede, Kano

Media profession­als across the country have been charged on the need to prioritise integrity as well as adhere to profession­al ethics in the digital age to continue to play their constituti­onal roles and promote national integratio­n.

The charge was given on Wednesday by the Vice Chancellor of the Federal University of Kashere, Professor Umaru Pate in Kano while delivering the 2023 Annual Lecture of the Nigerian Academy of Letters (NAL) with the title: “Media, Diversity and Nigeria’s National Integratio­n in the Digital Age”.

Pate acknowledg­ed that policies, institutio­ns and measures have deliberate­ly been taken in the past to promote integratio­n and inclusiven­ess, but the ability to manage these institutio­ns have been the issue, stressing that some of the challenges currently bedevillin­g Nigerian unity would have been nonissues if not that pillars and structures constituti­onally put in place to support integratio­n in the country have been crookedly tinkered with.

He said the “Issue of integratio­n and unity of Nigeria should not be seen as something that is concluded; we should not be complacent and take the unity for granted”, adding that deliberate actions in the form of efficient implementa­tion of policies, especially as it relates to media in the digital age must be given top priority.

Speaking on the performanc­e of the media during the just concluded general elections, Pate said the media being like a mirror only reflects the society in which it operates and that the since the media cannot be divorced from political realities, elites’ conflicts, which is about access to resources played out in the media, many at times at the detriment of national unity and integratio­n.

He advised that media profession­als must realise that for the industry to remain relevant, it has to continuous­ly adhere to the profession­al ethics and continue to be proven.

“And they should know that there is a very strong counterfor­ce from the alternativ­e (new) media giving them a run for their money,” he added.

Commenting shortly after the lecture, Professor Abdalla Uba Adamu, a former VC of National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN) stressed that integrity should be top priority for media profession­als as they navigate the challenges the digital age presents to Nigeria’s diversity and national integratio­n.

He said

social media platforms, which were hitherto meant for social interactio­n have become news media platforms without gatekeepin­g and this lack of integrity for content providers, which has simmered into the traditiona­l media have become a major challenge for the diversific­ation and liberalisa­tion of new media provided by the digital age.

On his part, the president of NAL, Professor Duro Oni said the Academy chose the topic for the lecture because it was of national value at the material time, especially as the country just concluded its general election with a lot of divisive contents given air space especially on the new media platforms.

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