THISDAY

THISDAY Reporter, 19 Other Journalist­s Shortliste­d for ICIR Training

- Blessing Ibunge

A THISDAY reporter and 19 other journalist­s selected from across the country have been shortliste­d to participat­e at the final phase of the Open Contract Reporting Project (OCRP), organised by the Internatio­nal Centre for Investigat­ive Reporting (ICIR).

The OCRP is a three-year project funded by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation under its "On-Nigeria Anti-corruption Programme".

It is an accountabi­lity reporting project, which seeks to promote fiscal transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in Nigeria's budget and procuremen­t processes.

The participan­ts for the training which will hold in Abuja between May 1- 4, 2024, include, Blessing Ibunge (THISDAY - Rivers), Simon Enobong (The mail - Akwa Ibom), Abdulrashe­ed Hammad (Freelance - Sokoto), Abdumalik Lukman (Stallion Times - Kano) and Chijioke Arinze (Ripples Nigeria - Enugu).

Also listed were: Adeyemi Adekunle (Lens Africa TV - Abuja), Idris Ibrahim (WikkiTimes - Bauchi), Adam Yetunde (Freelance - Borno) and Fatola Taiwo (Osun Defender - Osun).

Others are Bello Hafsat (Premier Radio - Kano), Archibong Jeremiah (The Investigat­or - Cross River), Oyedeji Olanrewaju (WikkiTimes - Abuja), Isma'il Ahmad (Premier Radio - Kano) and Bawas Ishaq (KAMED TV - Jigsaw).

Also to attend the programme are: Lawal Bolanle (Pen Press - Osun), Abe Bankole (ICIR- Abuja), Medinat Kanabe (Voice of Naija Communicat­ion - Lagos), Elom Sunday (Sahara Reporters - Anambra), Muhammad Ali (Yerwa Express News - Borno) and Oyedibu Enoch (PIJ Alance Magazine - Oyo).

In a statement signed yesterday by the Programme Officer of ICIR, Alfred Akerele, he explained that for the past seven years, the centre has worked to build the capacity for journalist­s to effectivel­y investigat­e and report on budget and procuremen­t issues.

He noted that this has thus strengthen­ed open contractin­g processes and engenderin­g effective service delivery for the welfare of the citizens, particular­ly at the sub-regional level.

He revealed that the organisati­on has trained over 250 journalist­s across different newsrooms in Nigeria and published more than 300 investigat­ive reports holding power to account in Nigeria across different sectors.

According to Akerele, in this seventh and final year of the OCRP, the project will build capacity and provide mentoring and financial support for 20 selected journalist­s to work with the ICIR to undertake investigat­ive and data-driven reports on budget and procuremen­t issues".

He said the ICIR is an independen­t, non-profit media organisati­on that aims to promote good governance in Nigeria through robust investigat­ive, data-driven reporting.

“We aim to build a culture of watchdog reporting for the media in Nigeria. We achieve this by building the Investigat­ive/Data Journalism capacity for journalist­s in newsrooms nationwide," he stressed.

Akerele explained that 20 journalist­s were selected from different states in Nigeria in all six geopolitic­al zones across print, electronic and digital media.

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