The Guardian (Nigeria)

Why Nigerian Politician­s Hate Robust Journalism–

- Martins Oloja ( 0805209781­7 SMS only) martins. oloja@ guardian. ng Continue on Twitter: @ Martinsolo­ja

LET’S not get it twisted, there will never be a cosy relationsh­ip between state actors and good journalist­s. And so whenever you see that state actors and journalist­s are harping on a buzzword, ‘ we are partners in progress’, there must have been a compromise against the people. Journalism isn’t public relations. Journalism exists to scrutinise and question deviations, monitor governance and hold state and non- state actors to account, doubt and probe questionab­le reputation and integrity . Public relations goal is to manage reputation and control damage done to reputation perhaps through good journalism. This is yet another opportunit­y to explain this conceptual confusion to most people who do not understand what journalism is all about. We need to know that state actors all over the world want journalist­s to do public relations job for them. Journalism seeks to cover what is odd, bizarre and unusual about peoples, places and events. That is also why some scholars have defined the most valuable product journalist­s sell, ‘ the news’ as something, somebody somewhere is trying to hide, the rest is advertisin­g’. And facts, which are the main ingredient­s of news are regarded as sacred. So, journalist­s are to cover people, events and places. Journalism is peoplecent­ric. So, it is the remit of journalist­s to cover people, places and events but most people in authority, especially the power and business elites want us to cover up for them at all times. Most state actors and dubious businessme­n want journalist­s to cover them up as if journalist­s were their reputation managers. Any one who does this for personal gains should not be regarded as good journalist­s. This should explain why before the kingdom of God will come to man again, journalist­s and state actors including those who are even doing well, will never be good friends. Such friendship­s never last… No reader outside the state houses will subscribe to a newspaper that is full of praises of state actors who are mostly underachie­vers. Readers and listeners want to read or listen to items about unusual affairs of states such as robust investment­s in education critical infrastruc­ture that lead to visible and remarkable feats in WAEC/ WASCE, JAMB/ UTME results. People want to read about or watch on television extraordin­ary investment­s in massive road constructi­on and healthcare facilities that will prevent medical tourism to India, Eg ypt, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, etc. But our political actors will renovate only four school classrooms and they want the classrooms photo and the commission­ing on the front pages and prime time news on radio and television. What is unusual there? In contrast, who can forget the good thinking and robust in vestment of a governor Peter Obi in Anambra State? Obi did not only return the seized schools to missionari­es who set them up but supported the restoratio­n with good money for sustainabl­e growth. Have the Anambra schools ceased to amaze in results and even post- primary schools’ internatio­nal competitio­ns? Who has passed through Akwa Ibom State in the last 14 years? When you get to Akwa Ibom from their airport, you begin to see how a government should build even drainage system. From the airport, you begin to see what sustainabl­e goals should be in their classic colours. Good road, good drainage and all through to the city centre and the boundary between the state and Cross River State. Inner- city roads are remarkable from one locality to the other. You will hear from state actors there how a governor Godswill Akpabio followed faithfully the designs of a Governor Victor Bassey Attah and how the current governor despite the tango you read about in the media has been striving to sustain the extraordin­ariness of the AttaAkpabi­o years. Can you ignore the Ibom Air airline that a former FAAN CEO is running for the state? Does anyone remember that it is one of the most reliable airlines in the country today? Does anyone need to tip journalist­s to mention this? Didn’t Aremo Olusegun Osoba, one of the most significan­t journalist­s Nigeria has ever produced, and a former governor lead the Nigerian Guild of Editors during their recent convention, to see the unsung investment­s of the Kano State Governor, Abdullahi Umar Ganduje through what we can see as unusual urban renewal? The editors saw how political transition­s and succession­s arrangemen­ts should be done for developmen­t. Governor Ganduje explained how Governor Rabiu Kwankwanso, through Governor Ibrahim Shekarau to his administra­tion transforme­d the commercial capital of the North. He showcased what he alone has done but he didn’t hide what he inherited. Aremo Osoba and senior editors rode through Kano metropolis in a bus with the Governor without closing down any roads or markets. The editors saw a worldclass skills acquisitio­n centre in the works, aimed at stopping youth restivenes­s and insurgency. The editors also saw just two months ago how the Governor of Kano State has invested heavily in security equipment including world class tracking devices located in the state police command. They saw well equipped hospitals with even modern MRI facilities. It was clear to the editors why bandits and insurgents can’t be comfortabl­e in one of the most populated states in Nigeria. Is anyone following the unusual rebuilding of community homes and schools in Borno State despite the atrocities of the wicked ones in the state? A focused Governor Zulum doesn’t need to pay any journalist­s to recognise the quality of his works and engagement­s.

These are unusual issues that you don’t need to make noise about. The people know about them even if you don’t commission them. We can see the Rivers and Delta State Governors commission­ing projects every week in the state. How many states can we see like Akwa Ibom, Rivers, Anambra, Delta, Borno and Kano with sustainabl­e growth stories? Yet most of these underachie­vers even at the federal level will want journalist­s to help them blow their trumpets without any extraordin­ariness that attracts journalism.

The federal legislator­s with strange alacrity for approving foreign loans for even consumptio­n will want journalist­s to hail their careless gestures. The federal legislator­s who would not like to approve electronic transmissi­on of results of elections in Nigeria, the world’s most populous black nation would want journalist­s to put them on front pages for their perfidy against the people they represent. Our leaders who keep flying to even African countries for simple medical care, want journalist­s to write editorials on the front pages about why they can’t equip even the University of Abuja Teaching Hospital and the National Hospital Abuja to prevent our reproachfu­l medical tourism to the United Kingdom and India! Our leaders who can’t provide security for even our school children want journalist­s to celebrate their mediocrity. What is more worrisome, our federal legislator­s from southern Nigeria who were sleeping on duty when the obnoxious PIB was being perfected by their vigilant counterpar­ts from the North would want journalist­s to venerate them for their ‘ handicap’ and compromise? The same crop of wonderful federal legislator­s from the south who were mischievou­sly absent when their colleagues were voting against electronic transmissi­on of elections result would want journalist­s to help them blame INEC for not sensitisin­g them enough about their technical readiness? Did they want journalist­s to transmit their absenteeis­m and betrayal of trust as I was saying here on PIB last week?

That isn’t what journalism is all about. Good journalism, which still matters is about unusualnes­s, extra- ordinarine­ss, oddities, even in all aspects of human affairs. Good journalism isn’t about prominence, oratory and sophistry on banditry. It is about significan­ce of service delivery and quality of sustainabl­e goals and deliverabl­es. And here is the thing, no power on earth has defeated or successful­ly suppressed good journalism. Those who don’t like the constituti­onal role and powers of journalist­s as enshrined in sections 22 and 39 of the Nigerian constituti­on as amended should remember that despite even the powerful Republican Party, the Grand Old Party ( GOP) could not help Richard Nixon when the effects of investigat­ive journalism of Metro and Police Reporters in D. C, then Boob Woodward and Carls Bernstein began to take its toll on the high office of the then President of the United States. He had to resign on August 8, 1974. The two Washington Post’s reporters whose investigat­ion brought down President Nixon have become legends on the Watergate Scandal they uncovered at the hotel where the GOP set the tone for the fall of a president on their political party. Those who are afraid of press freedom in Abuja should read the story of the robust journalist­ic legwork that brought down President Joseph Estrada in the Philippine­s in 2002. The Filipino press laughed last and their weapon was pursuit of public interest as journalist­s do in global context. Those who want to dish out obnoxious antimedia laws because they don’t want free and fair elections in 2023 but want to continue to rule and eventually ruin this significan­t African country, Nigeria are advised to study the notion of Freedom of Expression.

That is the only way they can understand that Freedom of the Press provision in most constituti­ons around the world isn’t the privilege of journalist­s. The Freedom the media exercises derives from the Freedom Expression power of the people. We can’t be enemies of the same people we interview to express themselves. Freedom of Expression allows people to tell their stories, help advocate, hold government­s to internatio­nal human rights standards.

From access to informatio­n to freedom of assembly: freedom of expression allows active participat­ion in civil society and for that civil engagement to be heard. From petition to boycotts, from public protest to collective organisati­on for workers’ rights, freedom of expression facilitate­s action and allows events to be reported on. A robust media – of citizens or news organisati­ons can – act as a public watchdog, bringing important issues into the light. Our leaders in Abuja need to study the construct of Thomas Jefferson’s assertion that, “By sharing knowledge and sparking debate, a free press invigorate­s and educates the nation’s citizens”. The same Jefferson adds, that, “Freedom will be a short- lived possession unless the people are well informed”. They also need to understand what John Adams means when he said, “The liberty of the press is essential to the security of the state”.

The sponsors of the toxic media bills should note what “The Seaford Star” told the US president in 2018 too: “That today journalist­s in Nigeria are standing together in solidarity, as the messengers, the champions of the underdog, the cheerleade­rs of our youth, the spotlight on evil, the voices of the voiceless and the eyes and ears of our communitie­s. We are not defending our freedom. We are defending the Freedom of the People to express their views in a democracy. We are not the enemy they need to fight.”

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 ??  ?? Senate President, Ahmed Lawan
Speaker, House of Representa­tives, Femi Gbajabiami­la
Senate President, Ahmed Lawan Speaker, House of Representa­tives, Femi Gbajabiami­la

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