• NUJ Delists NOA, Others from Membership Status

    …Approves membership of journalists working with registered online media Organisations

    The Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) has delisted the National Orientation Agency (NOA) and the Local Government Information Chapels across the country from its members status.

    The decision was made in a communique issued at the end of the Union’s Special Delegates Conference held in Kano State between January 24 to January 27, 2023.

    The conference which was declared opened by the Kano State Governor, Dr Abdullahi Umar Ganduje, also in attendance by the union’s national president, Comrade Chris Isiguzo, and delegates from the 37 councils across the country approved and passed amendment to some provisions of its constitution.

    According to the communique signed by the national secretary, Shu’aibu Usman Leman, the union approved First Degree, Higher National Diploma (HND) or its equivalent in Mass Communication and Journalism related courses as the entry qualification for the practice of Journalism in Nigeria and membership of the Union.

    The statement reads in part, “The Conference in session streamlined its membership in line with the provisions of the NUJ Constitution.

    “Accordingly, the Conference in session after exhaustive deliberations on membership status, delisted and dissolved the National Orientation Agency (NOA) and the Local Government Information Chapels across the country and directed State Councils to ensure full compliance with the provisions of the approved amendments to the NUJ Constitution.

    “It however, approved the membership of journalists working with online media organisations registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC), and recognised by the National Secretariat of the NUJ.”

    The union called on the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to conduct a credible, free, fair and acceptable 2023, general elections as enshrined in the Electoral Act 2022.

    “The Conference advocated the conduct of a credible, free, fair and acceptable 2023 general elections and urged Nigerians to take advantage of the process to elect credible leaders that will steer the ship of State in the next four years.

    “The Special Delegates Conference particularly challenged the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), to strive to meet the yearnings of Nigerians for a smooth, credible, free and fair elections by living and meeting the expectations of the people thus, urged the electoral umpire to ensure that it fulfills its mandate as enshrined in the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (as amended) and the provisions of the Electoral Act 2022.

    “The Conference commended the deployment of technology in the electoral process as backed by the provisions of the Electoral Act 2022, with the aim of enhancing the electoral system and building the confidence of the people in the conduct of elections in the country.

    “It viewed with concern the overheating of the polity by politicians through all forms of verbal attacks and use of thugs in electioneering.

    “It therefore counseled the political class, particularly the presidential candidates of some of the leading political parties to abide by the rules and do away with thuggery before, during and after the general elections,” it stated.

  • FactCheck Elections Trains Volunteers, Campus Journalists Others Ahead of 2023 Polls

    In its continuous efforts to flatten the infodemic curve during the electioneering period in Nigeria, FactCheck Elections has trained fact-checkers, students, and civil society organisations ahead of the 2023 elections.

    Over 45 participants attended the One-day Intensive Training on Elections Fact-Check held on January 14th at Ibadan, Oyo state capital.

    FactCheck Elections hosted the media practitioners through a partnership with Brain Builders Youth Development Initiatives, funded by Karibu Foundation.

    Different sessions were effectively handled by facilitators, including, Lekan Otufodunrin,  Media Career Development Specialist; Lanre Olagunju, fact-check editor at TheCable newspaper; Zainab Sanni, Multimedia Journalist and Fact checker at Media Innovation Development; David Ajikobi, Nigeria Editor at Africa Check, and Lanre Olanrewaju, an investigative data journalist at Dataphyte.

    The facilitators discussed Debunking Fake News using Open Source Investigation Tools, (OSINT); How electioneering campaigns and debates fuels misinformation and the way forward; The role of Traditional Media in Nigeria in Combating Fake News and Misinformation; Tips for Fact Checking in Real-time Using Social Media and other Online Tools and Data and the Use of Infographics for Fact Checks.

    During his hour-long discussion, Otufodunrin stated that the training is necessary to equip journalists to effectively combat misinformation.

    He also noted that the journalists can deploy the traditional ways of fact-checking, which include visiting a poll unit people are making claims about.

    “If we want peaceful fact-checkers to have a role to play as fact-checkers in fighting misinformation, we must be knowledgeable ourselves. Anybody can share information, but not everybody is a journalist.”

    On her part, Sanni emphasized the roles Traditional Media can play in combating fake news and misinformation, but noting that traditional media are faced with numerous challenges such as proprietary influence, funding, etc.

    Sanni however, called for the establishment of fact-check desks in media organisations across the country to facilitate effective debunking of misinformation, especially during election periods.

    She said, “There are lots of challenges for traditional media in combating fake news, they include proprietorial influence and funding amongst others.

    “There should be a collaboration between show hosts and fact checkers where public personalities that feature on shows could be held accountable for misinformation/ disinformation. Traditional media must create a fact check desk. This collaboration will help to easily take FactCheck to more people.”

    On his part, Ajikobi in an engaging discussion said there is a need to be ways democratic in fact-checking, saying fact-checkers need to reconfirm claims with claim makers before verification. He added that it is important to share the reports with a person that is being fact-checked for such a person to know his/her mistake.

    “Be careful when politicians pass off opinions as facts. Don’t assume that you know, go and check. Revalidate the claims and do well to share the fact-check reports with those who claimed so that they can acknowledge their error. It is a democracy of information,” he said.

    The Africa Check editor further discussed why people share mis/disinformation, saying it is because it aligns with their biases.

    Another facilitator, Olagunju charged the participants to be proactive and engage in the prebunking of information, saying, ” fact checkers should engage  in prebunking and be proactive by putting every information possible out there to preempt #misinformation.”

    Emphasizing the importance of fact-checking in decision-making, he said, “If we don’t fact-check, members of the public who are supposed to make decisions will be badly affected.”

    Oyedeji engaged the participants in data and the use of Infographics for fact-checking. He upheld that infographics enhance effective communication.

    According to him, the attention span of people to long content is low, and infographics help you to communicate your facts as briefly as possible.”

    Earlier in her welcome speech, the Executive Director of the Brain Builders Youth Development Initiative, (BBDYI), Jimoh Nurah Sanni stressed the contribution of the spread of fake news to the country’s decaying democracy, especially during election periods.

    She also emphasised the efforts of FactcheckElections in its unbiased fight against misinformation during the process of the election. “One of the major pointers of Nigeria’s democracy is the regular elections that we hold. However, at a time when democratic institutions are backsliding in different parts of the world, there is an urgent need to ensure that our democracy Is protected.

    “One of the biggest threats to democratic institutions, especially the electoral process, is the spread of fake news. Unfortunately, the interconnectedness of our world has made the spread of misinformation more viral than ever. As a result, the damage caused when it is left unchecked has unprecedented consequences.

    “We started the Fact Check Elections initiative to protect our democracy by being at the forefront of preventing the spread of fake news about our elections and mitigating its impact. We believe that for people to make informed and rational decisions at the polls, they must continuously have access to accurate information about the process.

    “Today, as part of our efforts to ensure that the 2023 election is not marred by misinformation, we have organized this workshop to train you and equip you with skills that will help you effectively fact-checkElections.

    “You have an essential role to play, and this workshop ensures that you are well-equipped for the task ahead. Our facilitators are experts who understand the enormity of the task ahead and are ready to provide you with the necessary resources.”

  • MRA: Expulsion of ARISE TV Cameraman from APC Presidential Campaign Programme Bizarre, High-handed, Violation of Media Right

    Media Rights Agenda (MRA) has condemned the expulsion of an Arise Television cameraman from a campaign meeting by the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, with the business community in Lagos last Friday.

    It added that the APC PCC blatant disregard for the rights of a journalist performing a constitutionally-protected function even at a time when the party is seeking to persuade Nigerians to vote its candidate into the highest office in the land, portends grave dangers for the media should that candidate prevail in the elections.

    The group described the campaign council’s allegation and justification for its unconstitutional action as ridiculous and baffling.

    It stated: “What authorization does the journalist require to perform his professional duty of covering a political campaign event? How can a purely journalistic act by a cameraman from a television station filming a public political campaign event and beaming it live to a public audience be characterized as espionage? Should the cameraman have first made a public announcement that he is covering the event so as not to be accused of doing so clandestinely?”

    The group pointed out that If this attitude is indicative of the vision of the party or its presidential candidate on the role of the media in the democratic process, “then we shudder to think of what the future holds for journalists and the media community should this attitude and mentality be brought into the highest political office in Nigeria.”

    The group stressed that it was the duty of the media to scrutinize and hold accountable public office holders and institutions as well as public figures, including political parties and candidates seeking public office, and to ensure that members of the public have as much information as possible about them, their programmes and their track records in and out of office.

    It said the media cannot properly play their role in the electoral process if they are prevented from having access to public events which form part of the process.

    According to the group, anyone unwilling to be subjected to scrutiny by the media has no business seeking public office. It is contrary to the code of journalism practice in Nigeria and everywhere else in the world that institutions or individuals who are being held accountable should be the ones to determine the media organizations or journalists that are allowed to hold them to account.

  • The Margin Dweller’s Point of View

    By Adenike Aloba |

    A Presentation at the 4th Female Researchers Panel, themed “Women in the Margins: The Irony of Media Coverage” at the ACSPN 9th Annual Conference.

    I am a Managing Editor in a newsroom, and I am scarce. And no, I am not the only woman in this “enviable” position which is why the theme of this panel is “women in the margins.” We acknowledge that there are more women in places where we were scarce before; otherwise, the theme would have been “let women in the room.”  There has been some growth, but it has been marginal, and the margins are cramped. We need more room.

    Only margin dwellers can understand the unique experiences and so perspectives of fellow margin dwellers, but it behooves them to share these experiences with the land occupiers. To make a consistent case for why land occupiers must yield grounds for the dispossessed land owners who, though having equal land rights, are dwelling in the margins.

    Several conversations allude to the fact that these conversations have been had enough, that there is no need for the passion and fervour, often misinterpreted as aggression, with which gender issues are discussed, but data tells us otherwise. The challenge of collecting gender data, especially in developing countries like Nigeria, means that the scale of limitations or the disparity in the parity between the genders is still largely unknown. According to the report by one of the foremost gender data repositories in the world titled “Mapping Gender Data Availability in Africa,” – Nigeria lacks critical up-to-date gender data across most indicators, especially on economic opportunities, education, and environment. Where these data exist, they sometimes do not conform to internationally recommended definitions.

    According to UN Women on Nigeria, “As of December 2020, only 46.7% of indicators needed to monitor the SDGs from a gender perspective were available, with gaps in key areas, in particular: unpaid care and domestic work, key labour market indicators, such as the gender pay gap and information and communications technology skills. In addition, many areas – such as gender and poverty, physical and sexual harassment, women’s access to assets (including land), and gender and the environment – lack comparable methodologies for regular monitoring. Closing these gender data gaps is essential for achieving gender-related SDG commitments in Nigeria”.

    Now, across many of the theories that attempt to help explain or give language to gender development, whether the socialisation theories that include the social learning theory or the cognitive class that includes the cognitive learning theory, which propounds that gender behaviours are learnt from the interaction of the biological, affective and cognitive; there is a running theme, modeling. Models are part of how we learn and/or understand gender, and in almost every instance, the mass media is described as a model.

    The agenda-setting and gatekeeping theories of the media reinforce the media’s positioning as models. While one places the media in a position to determine what the public talks about and, by extension, what it thinks about, the second place’s power in the hands of mass media to determine what makes it out on their platforms.

    While there have been arguments about the causal relationship between public thought and media agendas, especially with technology and the democratisation of information, inherent in that argument is a possibility that the agenda set by the media, which is almost directly proportional to what media gatekeepers allow to become an agenda, has shaped the worldviews of the human drivers of the technology, who are changing the information landscape.

    So inherent in the technology created is the social construct of its creators. And this worldview, if cognitive learning theory is to be believed, is shaped by both internal and external factors, and the media is one such external factor.  Technology, viewed from the Social Constructivist lens, with its intrinsic limitations,  lends credence to this assumption.

    However we look at it, there is no absolvement for the media in its role in the development of gender ideologies. So how well has the media performed this role? From the margin dwellers’ point of view? Not very well.

    The global media monitoring project answers the question, who is seen and heard in the media? And this is a direct quote from the report “Only 24% of news subjects – the people interviewed or whom the news is about – were female. Women’s points of view were less frequently heard in the topics that dominated the news agenda; even in stories that affected women profoundly, such as gender-based violence, the male voice prevailed. When women did make the news, it was primarily as “stars” or “ordinary people,” not as experts, professionals, or figures of authority. While the studies turned up some exemplary gender-balanced and gender-sensitive journalism, overall they demonstrated a glaring deficit in the news media globally: half the world’s population was barely present”.

    It will take 67 years to close the gender equality gap in traditional new media.

    This report was released in the year of COVID, and so COVID-related stories dominated news coverage the world over; the increase in science-related stories, however, was proportional to a decline in women’s voices in that section after a rise between 2010 and 2015. Unwittingly, again the media has reinforced the “science is for men” stereotype.

    The reduction in female voices in the news during Covid is even more ironic when compared with FP Analytics report “Elevating Gender Equality in COVID-19 Economic Recovery” which revealed that women and girls suffered more from the socioeconomic impact of the pandemic and are increasingly more likely to face poverty, economic insecurity, gender-based violence, and barriers to accessing critical health services.

    The GMMP report revealed that seven to nine stories out of 10 on sexual harassment, rape, and other gender inequalities reinforce or do nothing to challenge existing stereotypes.

    The numbers are, to put it nicely, abysmal.

    Although the world moved forward by 1 point, African media is stagnated. There is no improvement in gender representation in news media. A snap monitoring of business or economy stories across six media organisations in Southern, Western, and Eastern Africa on the 29th of October confirms this diagnosis is still correct in 2022.

    Nigeria is a perfect reflection of the African status, and if anyone has the time, a quick survey of the pages of newspapers on any day will confirm this. Male-to-female representation, as subjects, experts, or even featured images, is often roughly 80% male to 20% female. In one instance, a news story about the devastation of flooding experienced by sellers in a market spoke to seven men to share their experiences, and no female. It is a safe assumption from that report that the sellers in that market are only male; in reality, we know it is not true.

    The Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development’s media monitoring report on media coverage of conflict in Nigeria covered ten media organisations across print, broadcast, and digital. Female voices on conflict issues as sources are 5% to male voices 95%, less than 1 in 10 news sources were male. The authors of the stories are also predominantly male, 80% male to 20% female.

    When we, the margin dwellers, look at the media, a sea of men is reflected back to us. Among the many implications of lack of representation is the exclusion from the design of solutions, a dangerous complexity in equality conversations. A simple social experiment, asking men and women, “when you think about being kidnapped, what is your greatest fear?” yielded interesting results, and if we do the same experiment in any room in Nigeria, the results will be similar.

    Overwhelmingly, men feared death, ransom payments’ impact on their families’ economies, and, to a lesser degree, trauma. For women, 9 out of 10 times, the fear is rape, abuse, and trauma. Now, if a room full of men are designing policies and strategies, they are unlikely to create solutions that deal with this uniquely female angle, and it is through no fault of theirs; it is simply not in their frame of reference. Now, when the media portrays kidnappings and the myriad of security challenges from a male perspective, the media unwittingly postures to the public, especially decision-makers, that the issue is male.

    The maths is that simple.

    Perhaps this is the same challenge the media itself has, that the gatekeepers who determine agendas are predominantly male. So their frames of reference or worldviews are limited to the male perspective. It does appear so because worldwide, women make up only 33% of the journalism workforce and less than 25% of its management and boards, including media owners and editors.

    For example, the infamous rejection of gender bills is by itself heartbreaking, but media coverage of the rejection is even more so. Yes, there was coverage, but was it nuanced or mere informational describing yet another incidence in the chaotic landscape of Nigerian governance?  But even more disheartening is the lack of local coverage beyond National news organisations. Indicating that Gender is still a uniquely elitist conversation, yet much of our nurture happens locally.

    Here is a summation “if the media reflects it, it exists. If the media does not challenge it, it will continue to exist”.

    From their cramped spaces, the margin dwellers are speaking up to one of the vital power brokers of land shares, the media. Our unique perspectives and experiences are missing from your outputs. We do not blame you, you don’t live within our margins, nor have you learned to walk circumspectly within the bounds of our limitations. But we do ask that you listen and take action, not just the “act of listening” but acting upon what you have heard in a way that clearly affects your processes and, by extension, your actions.

    Bio: Adenike Aloba is the Managing Editor and Program Director of Dataphyte

  • PREMIUM TIMES Names Oladeinde Olawoyin Business Editor

    Mr Olawoyin says his new role will further help him to contribute his quota towards the development of the nation.

    The management of PREMIUM TIMES, Nigeria’s foremost investigative news outfit, has announced the appointment of Olawoyin Oladeinde as the Business and Economy Editor of the newspaper.

    Mr Olawoyin succeeds Ini Ekott, a pioneer member of staff, who exited the organisation at the end of 2022, after 11 years of meritorious service.

    “Oladeinde is an exceptional journalist and writer,” Managing Editor Idris Akinbajo said of the appointment. “We trust in his ability to carry on excellently well from where Mr Ini Ekott stopped and to ultimately take our business reporting to a new level.

    “In the years he has been here, he has demonstrated the capacity to break barriers and set new standards. We are confident he will bring these to bear on this new assignment.”

    Reacting to his appointment, Mr Olawoyin said, “‘Nigeria is at a major crossroads in its efforts to engender growth, pull people out of poverty and deepen socio-economic development.

    “The media, therefore, has an important role to play in ensuring that the nation realises its potentials. I am quite confident that the new role would help me contribute my quota towards the development of the nation.”

    THE MAN OLADEINDE OLAWOYIN

    Mr Olawoyin’s work at PREMIUM TIMES focuses on issues around oil and gas, business, finance, agriculture, economy, power, maritime, and development. He is a multiple award-winning journalist, who has been nominated for and won several awards and fellowships.

    Oladeinde Oladeinde
    Oladeinde Oladeinde

    He bagged his National Diploma and Higher National Diploma certificates in Mass Communication from The Polytechnic Ibadan in 2008 and 2011, respectively. He also graduated with First Class from the Department of Mass Communication at the University of Ilorin, where he finished as the department’s best-graduating student.

    In 2017, he was nominated in the journalism category of The Future Awards Africa, held in Lagos. In 2018, he was a recipient of the West Africa Media Excellence Awards (WAMECA), held in Ghana, as well as the Nigerian Breweries Golden Pen Awards, held in Lagos.

    In December 2018, alongside other young journalists across Africa, he was named “Global Goalkeeper” by the Gates Foundation at an elaborate ceremony in South Africa, in recognition of his reporting of the global goals.

    In October 2019, Mr Olawoyin was among 12 finalists from around the world shortlisted for the 2019 Thomson Foundation Young Journalist Award. He also clinched the big prize as the 2019 Capital Market Reporter of the Year at the PwC Awards for Excellence in Financial Journalism. In December 2019, he was also among three winners of the African Media Development Foundation (AMDF) Awards, held in Kaduna.

    In 2020, he was among finalists selected from across Africa at the Sanlam Award for Excellence in Financial Journalism ceremony, held in South Africa.

    Mr Olawoyin has attended courses on finance, economy, oil and gas and capital market reporting in Nigeria, Ghana, South Africa, the United Kingdom, and other parts of the world.

    He is a 2018 recipient of the Wole Soyinka Award for Investigative Reporting (WSAIR), a 2018 fellow of the Natural Resource Governance Institute (NRGI), a 2019 fellow of the African Science Literacy Network (ASLN), a 2020 recipient of the Climate Tracker’s Journalism Fellowship, a 2021 Fellow of the International Centre for Journalists (ICFJ) ‘In The Name of Religion’ fellowship, among others.

    Last October, Mr Olawoyin emerged as the Business Reporter of the Year at the West African Media Excellence Awards (WAMECA), held in Accra, Ghana. Mr Olawoyin was also a finalist in the 2022 editions of the DAME and PwC awards held in Lagos.

    Founded in 2011, PREMIUM TIMES has grown to become one of the most respected and reliable news media in the world.

    In addition to a Pulitzer Prize (which its reporters share with ICIJ colleagues who worked on the Panama Papers), its journalists have also clinched the Global Shining Light Award, the One World Award and numerous other local, national, and international awards in the platform’s 12-year history.

    Culled PREMIUM TIMES