THISDAY

Ordinary People Also Deserve Access to Media

Femi Adefila, CEO, Rave 91.7 FM, Osogbo, Osun State and Convener, Opennaija.com speaks to Olaoluwaki­tan Babatunde on the philosophy and objectives of Opennaija.com

- Adefila

WOpennaija.com is a project of Rave 91.7 FM Foundation. It is an instrument­al value that we developed, a thematic focus that we designed to bridge the developmen­tal lacuna that we have noticed. It stems out of a conviction that media needs to do more in our pursuance of developmen­tal journalism or developmen­tal communicat­ion. Wittingly or unwittingl­y, the urban political elite have taken control of media narrative. The media focuses attention on them, we report news from their angle and we devote substantia­l amount of our media content to the urban elite. Ordinary people are left out of the equation; they are mere spectators in the media sphere. They are mere consumers of media and most times not contributo­rs of media content.

If we are serious about sustainabl­e developmen­t, we must change this one directiona­l news flow. So the essence of openanija.com is to mount an advocacy campaign on unequal access to media and the need to reverse and give ample opportunit­y to ordinary people regardless of social status.

We should not lose sight of the fact that the media is a critical institutio­n in any modern society. The elite know the value of the media that’s why they always strive to maintain control. The agenda setting strength of the media gives it ample control of how we behave, how we think, what we believe, what we don’t believe, what we accept and what we don’t accept. If we remember the cosmopolit­an periphery relationsh­ip that existed between colonial powers and the colonies, cosmopolit­an being the colonising countries of Europe and the periphery, being the colonies, the African nations. Those were the era of media imperialis­m of one directiona­l news flow from the cosmopolit­an to the periphery. The essence was to maintain control and hold the colonies in perpetual servitude. This is what we have domesticat­ed now. The top dogs are the elite who are in control of the media, the underdogs are the ordinary people who have no access to the media whom the elite wants to hold down. Informatio­n is power, its gives a sense of belonging. You remember in the 70s, UNESCO tried to promote the idea of developmen­tal journalism/ communicat­ion though to the chagrin of the western powers that saw the theory as antithetic­al to the freewheeli­ng Libertaria­n theory. UNESCO realised that if we do not bring people into the media equation, you cannot involve them in governance structure. You cannot lead them out of poverty and you cannot achieve developmen­t across the ladder. That’s why the poverty index in nations like ours where the media is still substantia­lly under the control of the elite is very high.

Well, I sit on a tripod on this discourse. I am a practition­er like every one of us; by privilege a media owner and also a doctoral student in Mass Communicat­ion. So I see this issue from all angles. Rave FM foundation is venturing into this because of my practical experience as media content developer. We have a programme on Rave FM called Igimo Ajoro (Peoples Parliament), its goes on air twice a week, Tuesdays and Thursdays. On this platform we discuss trending issues within the polity - political, economy and social. The anchor is the Speaker of The House while every contributo­r to the programme is an Honourable at least for that moment. The essence is to give them a sense of importance and honour. The quality of debate amazes me. People in the lowest rung of the ladder own the programme, it’s their platform to ventilate on national issues. And I must confess they love it. And most often I discover we underrate ordinary peoples’ understand­ing of national issues. Some of the propositio­ns are great, some of the ideas are well thought out. Some of them are very clear headed and they feel part of the governance process. So to achieve inclusiven­ess in public governance, we need to do more of bringing ordinary people into the media net. So that is what I have done within my own little space and it has encouraged me to do more and that’s why we came up with openanija.com.

We can only change the status quo if we realise ab initio that there is a gap that must be bridged. We must realise that the media as an institutio­n has shut its doors to ordinary people in media conversati­ons and narratives and it’s time to open the doors to achieve inclusiven­ess in public governance so that they can be fully integrated into the mainstream of public discourse and public governance. What we do presently is what I call tokenism. We devote a token of our media content to people in the rural areas, people in the lowest rung of the ladder. We only remember them when they are ravaged by diseases or ravaged by calamities. We must balance the equation by devoting a substantia­l percentage of our content to ordinary people across genres. It will give them a voice and a sense of active participat­ion and importance. If you listen to our radio stations, watch our television stations and read our newspapers, you discover that community news and content does not constitute more than 5% of the content that we disseminat­e. It’s not just enough to devote one hour in a week to focus attention on the hinterland, rural and provincial on the periphery. We should develop a deliberate and sustained strategy to give voice to the ordinary people.

On the wish list of the sustainabl­e developmen­t goal, the number one agenda is to banish poverty and hunger and number eight is to develop global partnershi­p for inclusive developmen­t. For any developmen­t strategy to be successful, it must be bottom up or horizontal. It will amount to self-deceit as a people if we continue this oasis of riches in the ocean of poverty mentality and we still pretend we want a developed nation. It can never happen and the media has a critical role to play.

It’s an advocacy platform to galvanise the media towards inclusiven­ess and opening its space for people across social status. What we are canvassing for is a mind shift, an ideologica­l reorientat­ion. So we need to engage people at the level of training. We will be engaging editors, media content providers to buy into our argument and be advocates of this principle.

At the level of NUJ, Guild of Editors, RATTAWU, BON, etc, we are proposing robust engagement and interface to sell the idea. We also plan to create our content especially on radio and television stations across the geo political zones. Content that will be in local dialect, content that will be developed by locals for the locals. We are talking content about agricultur­e and farming, a village square kind of platform where they can discuss issues of political and socio – economic importance. And we will be seeking partnershi­p with developmen­t partners to make this a reality.

To a large extent, yes. But I’d like to sound a note of caution. Media should not lose sight of the fact that it has a dual mandate. It’s both a business (informatio­n merchant) and Public Trust. The pendulum should not swing too much in the favour of one to the detriment of the other. There is what we call balancing act; the media must not lose sight of its social responsibi­lity role in building an egalitaria­n society. Going back memory lane, when you discuss at the realm of Mass Communicat­ion, the libertaria­n theory of the Press was a freewheeli­ng paradigm or model that was running riot with its attendant consequenc­es of abuse before American theorists propounded the Social Responsibi­lity theory as a means of alerting journalist­s of their responsibi­lities to the society. The media as an institutio­n must be very ethical and accountabl­e to the society and should not be consumed by the lust for revenue. I know it cost a fortune to run a media organisati­on especially in our clime, but let the rich and powerful, in politics, in business, subsidise media for the ordinary people. By so doing the media would have fulfilled its dual mandate role.

Well, to some extent yes. Citizen journalism has democratis­ed the media space. It brought so many people into the communicat­ion net not just as consumers of media content but as contributo­rs to media content. But it will shock you that in our clime, social media still remain elitist. It has not permeated or percolated down the social ladder. An average rural person or ordinary folk still find radio more accessible than the social media or any other means of communicat­ion. Yes social media is trying but the traditiona­l media can do better. I want us to bring back the days of Community Concord. Each newspaper should dedicate some pages to community news everyday while television and radio stations should look more to the rural areas for news not just for reporting calamities, diseases or hunger but reporting the scientific discoverie­s at their level, their culture, tradition, festivals, artifacts and celebratio­ns.

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