Category: Niger Delta

  • Akwa Ibom community denies IPOB, ESN membership

    Akwa Ibom community denies IPOB, ESN membership

    By Bassey Anthony, Uyo

    Natives of Midim community in Essien Udim Local Government Area of Akwa Ibom State have denied being members of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) and the Eastern Security Network (ESN).

    They lamented that young men and even traditional rulers in the community have been wrongfully branded, stigmatised and arrested over the allegation that they belonged to IPOB and ESN.

    Rights activist and spokesperson of Midim community, Mr Victor Udom during a chat with reporters at the weekend disclosed that politicians bent on resuscitating a dreaded cult group, ‘Akwa Marine’ were behind the smear campaign against the image of the community.

    Udom said those opposed to the clandestine activities of the gang were now framed up as being members of IPOB and ESN through the wrong information to security agencies.

    “Thanks to God that without the help of government we have brought the gangs to their knees in our community as evident in the many repentant members that have turned out to seek pardon from the community, an exercise that is still in process till date. Midim community started this war for peace since 2015 when all levels of governance were still in deep slumber.

    “We are therefore very displeased that, despite our efforts, we are being targeted with some mischievous blackmail as IPOB/ESN secession agitation sympathisers to intimidate us in our continuous engagements against the politically-motivated cult gangs that invaded our communities. This is nothing but a ploy by our politicians to reposition criminal formations in preparation for the 2023 elections.

    “The ongoing diversionary tactics is counter-productive. We must have the courage and the political will to see the truth, tell ourselves the truth and use the truth to fight criminality and injustice. Our community is today blackmailed and given an IPOB colouration when that is not true. Akwa Ibom would not have had the security challenges it has witnessed recently if the government had stopped playing politics with cultism, insecurity and public safety.”

    Udom alleged that the state government’s disposition on partisan consideration by condoning and protecting both criminals and known suspects was fueling the worsening security situation in Essien Udim.

    “The state government must be sincere to admit that its disposition that tends to create the impression that it condones crime, criminals and protect known suspects due to partisan considerations have also helped in worsening the security situation, especially in Essien Udim.

    “Over 80 per cent of those named by the Directorate of State Security (DSS) report as being cultists, sponsors and major financiers of various cult groups in Akwa Ibom State are today serving as either elected or appointed officials of the AKSG. Can anyone with conscience fault our claim that the government is to be blamed for the security crisis we face today in Essien Udim?”

    Udom urged the security agencies to reject their source of intelligence in the person of one Boniface who was busy bragging about having ‘black book’ that he put down names of people that he wants to eliminate, noting that he was using that list to threaten and defraud those who disagreed with him.

    He appealed to security operatives to rely only on a discreet investigation to sieve out the fake information and also guard against torturing anyone wrongly arrested but should give a level playing ground for fair hearing.

  • Ex-agitators laud Dikio for new lease of life

    Ex-agitators laud Dikio for new lease of life

    Our Reporter 

    Beneficiaries of the Presidential Amnesty Programme (PAP) under the umbrella of Presidential Amnesty Program beneficiary forum (PDF) have commended Interim Administrator of the project Col. Milland Dikio (rtd) on the recent appointment of beneficiaries into the workforce of the PAP.

    The group lauded the bold initiative as heart-warming but urged him to employ more beneficiaries into the Presidential Amnesty Office because many beneficiaries of the programme are jobless.

    It said: “No one is more qualified to work in the interest of the programme than the beneficiaries of the programme.

    “Any initiative by the Amnesty Office to invest in job and wealth creation or its equivalent will help to scale up development underpinning a viable means of facilitating the re-integration of the beneficiaries in society”.

    Read Also; Boro: Dikio calls for unity, sustenance of peace in Niger Delta

    It added the ex-agitators who have not been accommodated should be catered for in a new phase of the programme, giving the success recorded by the programme thus far.

    This, they said, will scale down violence and militancy in the Niger Delta region.

    The group leader, Comrade Senibo Spencer, told newsmen in Port-Harcourt, the River state capital, that the appointment of the interim administrator came at a time when all untrained and unempowered beneficiaries needed benefits of the Amnesty Programme most.

    He called on the delegates and critical stakeholders to give their support to the interim administrator as his appointment has brought fresh hopes for beneficiaries of the Presidential Amnesty Programme, stating “nothing can change in the world if we don’t have the support of the people around us”.

    Spencer thanked President Muhammadu Buhari for appointing a qualified and well-seasoned diplomat with a vast range of experience to oversee the affairs of the Presidential Amnesty Programme.

    He called on the President and the National Assembly to grant Dikio the mandate to launch the fourth phase of the Presidential Amnesty scheme to accommodate those marginalised or too scared to accept the Presidential Amnesty during the 2009 proclamation by late ex-President Umaru Yar’Adua.

  • Group hails Akpabio over move for peace

    Group hails Akpabio over move for peace

    By Bassey Anthony, Uyo

    A socio-political group, Akwa Ibom Democratic Forum (ADF) has praised the Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Senator Godswill Akpabio’s recent visit to Oporoza Town in the Gbaramutu Kingdom, Delta State to meet ex- agitator, Chief Government Ekpemopolo (Tompolo).

    Tension had risen in the Niger Delta region following a seven-day ultimatum issued by Ekpemopolo for the Federal Government to constitute a substantive board for the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC).

    The group thanked the Minister and his entourage for the courage, patriotic zeal and humility which inform the all-important peace trip to the former militant leader.

    A statement signed by the Director-General of ADF Obongemem Ekperike Ekpo and made available to reporters in Uyo Akwa Ibom State further highlighted that the outcome of the meeting has led to the review of the ultimatum and a better working understanding that would advance the progress of the region.

    According to Ekpo, who is a former member of House of Representatives, when ADF earlier in the year adopted the Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Senator Godswill Akpabio as our Grand Leader and espoused the philosophical concept of Dependable Leadership as the driving motto of our organisation, some may have seen these decisions as a mere emotive and sentimental overflow of feelings that appeared perhaps not well-distilled.

    The group in the statement noted that Thursday, June 3, 2021, acquitted them in that choice they made when Akpabio in the face of growing tension arising from 7- day ultimatum issued by High Chief Government Ekpemupolo, aka, Tompolo, on  the constitution of NDDC Board demonstrated dependable leadership by initiating a timely dialogue that has brought truce and ended what seemed as an impending imbroglio in the Niger Delta and indeed, Nigeria.

    Parts of the statement read: “Akwa Ibom Democratic Forum (ADF) wishes to place on record the historic effort of the Minister who had to risk his life in an open flying boat for three hours to and three hours from the Gbaramatu Kingdom on the water in search of peaceful resolution to an imminent conflict that had the potential to impact negatively on  Niger Delta and stall its developmental strides.

    “ADF is proud to be associated with this determined personality who demonstrated such uncommon courage, leadership and sacrificial commitment to peace which saw him departing Oporoza Town at 9:00 p.m. and plodding through the risky waters for three hours to arrive Warri at almost midnight.”

  • Politicians behind #OccupyNigerDelta protests, group alleges

    Politicians behind #OccupyNigerDelta protests, group alleges

    By Simon Utebor, Yenagoa

    Crusaders, under the auspices of Niger Delta Peace Advocates (NDPA) have faulted the rising protests and renewed agitations for President Muhammadu Buhari to constitute a substantive board for the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC).

    NDPA in a statement yesterday by its National Coordinator, Osagie Osagiede, accused political office holders from the region of sponsoring the recent protests by Ijaw youths and the ultimatums issued by ex-militant leaders.

    The group said despite the sincerity in the call for the constitution of the substantive board for the NDDC, the rising tension and threats of bloodshed by the protesters and issuance of ultimatum were misdirected and misplaced.

    Read Also; Ijaw youths protest over NDDC board may cause ethnic war –Group

    It said the development showed the hidden agenda of the sponsors and their cronies to persuade President Buhari to hurriedly appoint the NDDC board, to fulfil their inordinate ambitions for 2023.

    The NDPA said it could have been more justifiable if the agitations were predicated on bringing about the realisation of restructuring, equal partnership in the oil and gas industry, true federalism and constructive development.

    It, however, lamented that those allegedly sponsoring the protests and ultimatums were only interested in stopping the ongoing forensic audit, sacking of the Minister of the Niger Delta Affairs, Senator Godswill Akpabio, and the constitution of a substantive board to perpetuate their political ambitions and cover up their past loot at the commission.

  • Emmanuel urges council chairmen to replicate state’s economic programmes

    Emmanuel urges council chairmen to replicate state’s economic programmes

    By Bassey Anthony, Uyo

    Akwa Ibom State Governor Udom Emmanuel has urged local governments to replicate economic exploits of the state in their areas.

    He spoke yesterday at Ikot Akpa Nkuk, the headquarters of Ukanafun Local Government, during the maiden Ukanafun Economic Development Summit to mark 45 years of the creation of the council.

    The governor said economic activities in the urban areas of the state should be replicated at the hinterlands through local government chairmen.

    Tagged: ‘Repositioning Ukanafun for Sustainable Development’, Emmanuel said the creation of the local government was a journey in economic self-advancement.

    He encouraged councils to make an annual economic assessment so that the purpose of self-government at whatever level would not be defeated.

    “The creation of a state, or in this case, a local government area, is in itself a release for a journey in economic self-advancement, and if all we do on a yearly basis is to number the cycles, without counting our blessings on the economic front, the purpose of self-government at whatever level would have been defeated.

    Read Also; Emmanuel Osodeke is new ASUU President

    “This is why at the state level; our number one priority is the economy. The second priority has been the economy and third priority is also the economy. Without a vibrant economy, nothing works,” he said.

    The governor noted that the theme of the summit is in consonant with the vision of his administration, which is aimed at transforming the state and fast-tracking, its attainment of destiny by means of a vibrant economy.

    He hailed Ukanafun Local Government for immortalising the late state Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Mr. Udo Ekpenyong, during the 45th anniversary of its creation, saying the deceased, an indigene of the area, deserved the monuments raised for his posthumous honour.

    The Chairman of the Summit Planning Committee, Aniekan Ukpanah, recalled that Ukanafun Local Government was created in 1976 during the regime of Gen.  Olusegun Obasanjo and appealed to the indigenes to develop the area, to befit its age and status.

    Mr. Ray Ekpu, a prominent indigene of the area, said the state government has not sited any industry in the area to boost economic renaissance at the grassroots.

    “Today, Ukanafun Local Government is 45 years old, but Governor Emmanuel has not considered it necessary to site any cottage industry here,” he added.

    Ekpu urged the governor to consider the area in the industrialisation drive of his administration.

    Emmanuel has said the ongoing 8km World Bank assisted drainage project will be completed and inaugurated in December.

    The $50million project, which aims to end over 15-year-old flood problem in Uyo, cuts across 17 villages in Uyo, Ibesikpo Asutan and Nsit Ibom local governments.

    Inspecting the project yesterday, the governor, who hailed the speed and quality of the project, told the contractors that as a 100 per cent pre-funded project, there was no excuse for the work to exceed December.

  • Investment in infrastructure: The GOtv Nigeria example

    Investment in infrastructure: The GOtv Nigeria example

    By Palang Yakubu

    Investing in Nigeria, as every prospective investor is aware, promises enormous dividends. On account of the country’s huge population, the largest on the continent, there is a vast market for any product or service. This makes investment commitment in Nigeria so appealing. But reaping the dividends available from the large market, in most cases, requires the investor to face and surmount numerous intense challenges such as high operating costs, policy instability and often declining disposable income, which inhibits effective demand.

    The requirements are much stiffer for investors with long-term investment commitments, who have to confront the country’s notoriously acute infrastructural deficit and fill the gaping gaps-all by themselves-and continue to do so. To take on the infrastructural challenges, particularly of the technological variety, requires near-blind faith in Nigeria and, of course, money. Tonnes of it, that is.

    This is what I have seen with the approach of GOtv Nigeria, the country’s second digital terrestrial television (DTT) service provider, which launched in 2011. The operator was, so to speak, condemned to take the route it has taken, as it was a pioneer on a few fronts. It arrived at a time that migration from the analogue to digital broadcasting platform had become a major programme for around the globe, following the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) agreement of 2006 of which Nigeria was a signatory.

    It also coincided with the initial expression of Federal Government’s interest in getting the country on the digital broadcasting train. In line with Nigeria’s aspiration to be part of the new broadcasting ecosystem, GOtv Nigeria launched with the DVB-T2 decoder, the second-generation, ITU-approved hardware for digital television broadcasting. This made the DTT operator the first in the country to offer its subscribers the most modern broadcast technology which, unlike analogue, delivers premium audio-visual quality and a higher number of channels, including access to Free-to-Air at the expiration of subscription, as well as preventing signal depreciation in adverse weather conditions. The hardware (decoder and antenna) also offered ease of installation, as it can self-installed, making the use of an installer not absolutely necessary. With additional television channels the new technology offers also came audio channels, at no extra cost to the subscriber, on the GOtv platform. These came with the launch of Wazobia FM and Naija FM, making it the first DTT operator to carry such on its platform.

    Further support for Nigeria’s digital transition aspirations also came in the shape of commitment to ramping up public awareness of the programme, with GOtv Nigeria becoming the first DTT operator to support of National Broadcasting Commission’s (NBC) digital migration flag-off in Jos, with “Digilevelz Don Land, No Carry Last” campaign, which covered 26 cities across the country.

    Making all of these available to the subscriber was no cakewalk. Nothing of the sort is ever is, I have to add. Mallam Ishaq Modibbo-Kawu, former Director-General of the NBC, famously noted that a major impediment to DTT network coverage in states where the digital transition programme of the Federal Government had been launched was topography.

    “Coverage is related to topography. Take an example of the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja. It is a city of hills and undulating grounds. The signal distributor for Abuja has purchased feeder pillar transmitters, which will be installed for the entire Abuja and environs to be covered. The same thing applies in Plateau. The signal distributor has to put feeder pillar transmitter in places like Langtang for the entire state to be covered,” Modibo-Kawu explained at the time.

    Topographical hindrances were exactly what GOtv subscribers did not have to endure because the operator, running on the digital platform from the off, had already rolled out in about 50 cities across 26 states across the country. To make the service available to subscribers in zones across the country took heavy investments in digital transmission technology infrastructure.

    In four years, 2011 to 2015, a hefty sum of $95.5million was sunk into the erection of 73 transmitter sites. The transmitter sites make available DTT network coverage for more than 50 per cent of country’s population.

    To maintain the transmitter sites, which number grew as time went on, for effective transmission, the sum of N8, 178, 372, 223. 40 was spent on between 2014 and 2018. In 2014 alone, N572.2million was spent. The following year, the sum rose to N1.39billion. It would climb, respectively, to N1.9billion in 2016, N2.033billion in 2017 and N2.28 billion in 2018. The heavy lashings of money have ensured subscriber access to the operator’s service in about 70 cities across the country, making it, by a distance, the most expansive DTT network coverage in the country.

    It is to this wide network coverage that the two companies licensed as signal distributors by the under the Federal Government’s digital switchover programme are playing catch-up and may do so for much longer, given how sparse their respective coverage has been in about five years since they started operations. Experts have blamed their inability to provide sustainable nationwide DTT coverage on lack of finance and technical capacities. I am tempted to agree with the diagnosis.

    The internet is brimming with complaints by Nigerians who have purchased the device recommended by the NBC as its digital transition vehicle. In states where the switchover programme has been launched, the complaints have been heavy on partial or total lack of reception, making their set-top-boxes into something acquired for decorative purposes. In most of the states, signal is received only in the state capitals, leaving residents out of them out in the lurch. There are subscribers, who have complained of non-receipt of signal for as long as six months, as infrastructure provided by signal carriers have remained grossly sup-par.

    Along with these investments in transmission infrastructure have been similarly hefty outlays in the shape of regulatory fees. In 2019, Details Nigeria, promoters of GOtv Nigeria, paid N1.5billion to the NBC for the renewal of its DTT licence for another three-year period. It also paid the sum of N50million for the renewal of its Direct-to-Home (DTH) licence for another five years. In 2014, it paid N2billion for a five-year DTT licence and N50 million for the renewal of its DTH licence for a further five-year period.

    The various sums invested in the provision and maintenance of broadcast infrastructure as well as regulatory levies are exclusive of what was invested in bringing digital broadcasting to Nigeria.

    • Yakubu, a public affairs commentator, writes from Jos

  • ‘We no longer block roads to get amnesty stipends’

    ‘We no longer block roads to get amnesty stipends’

    By Mike Odiegwu, Port Harcourt  

    An ex-militant leader and former commander of the Bakassi Freedom Fighters (BFF), ‘Gen.’ Franklin Duduku, has hailed the reforms in the Presidential Amnesty Programme (PAP).

    He said ex-agitators no longer blocked roads to protest unpaid monthly allowances.

    Duduku hailed the Interim Administrator of Presidential Amnesty Programme (PAP), Col. Milland Dixion Dikio (retd), for carrying out the reforms to guarantee prompt payment of the monthly stipends of ex-agitators.

    Read Also; Amnesty boss tells Niger Delta youths to shun violence

    Speaking yesterday in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, Duduku said the timely payment of the stipends was one of the positive steps taken by Dikio to stabilise the Niger Delta and sustain peace in the area.

    He said before the current amnesty boss came on board, ex-agitators usually blocked major roads in the region, including sections of the East-West Road, to protest before the amnesty office would release their stipends.

    Duduku recalled that in most cases, the amnesty office owed ex-agitators arrears of stipends, causing unrest among youths.

    But he said such ugly narrative had changed because Dikio fulfilled his promise by paying ex-agitators their stipends on the 25th of every month.

  • Orbih canvasses security outfit for South-South

    Orbih canvasses security outfit for South-South

    By Bisi Olaniyi, Benin

    National Vice Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), South-South, Chief Dan Orbih, has called on Governors of the South-South region to establish a regional security outfit.

    Orbih stated this during a courtesy call with his zonal executives on the Edo Governor, Godwin Obaseki, at Government House, Benin yesterday.

    The visit marks the beginning of a planned tour of all PDP-controlled States in the South-South region.

    Orbih admonished South-South Governors not to relent in their efforts to find a lasting solution to security challenges in the region, including the clamour for state police.

    The PDP national vice chairman also called on the Federal Government to stop the regime of sleaze in the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), asking government to stop borrowing money to promote corruption.

    He said: “The growing insecurity occasioned by the uncontrolled activities of ruthless bandits and herdsmen is worrisome.

    *We have lost innocent men and women in the past six years more than nations at war. A situation where people can no longer go their farms is a signal for impending food crisis.

    Read Also: Babalola, Ooni to convene summit on Nigeria’s challenges

    ‘We call on the Governors and leaders of the South-South to come together and protect our people.

    “The Yorubas have taken steps to check the menace of these groups with the formation of Amoetekun, the Igbos have their Ebubeagu security network. What are we doing in the South-South?

    “We must fashion out ways in collaboration with various security agencies to check the unprovoked assault on our people.

    “On the whole, I make bold to state that the current security problems confronting us is a threat to democracy.”

    He added: “We are embarking on this tour at a very difficult and challenging time in our nation’s history.

    “The issues confronting us today are so serious that COVID-19 pandemic that has challenged the world is dwarfed by domestic problems facing us.

    “Our people are distressed. The federal roads are in bad shapes and unsafe. Last week, Senator Cliff Odia was attacked twice same day by different groups on his way from Edo to Abuja.

    *We enjoin you to join forces with those calling for state and community policing to compliment the present structure. The south south Governors must not relent in the demand for state Police.”

    Speaking on the crumbling economy, Orbih asked the Muhammadu Buhari-led administration to take critical steps to address what he described as uncontrolled maladministration at the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC).

    “We call on the Federal Government to stop borrowing money to fund corruption. Lack of accountability in the NDDC has affected development in the zone.

    “It has eroded trust and promotes unemployment and criminality in the youths. An hungry man is a angry man. The Federal Government must stop playing politics with NDDC. The rising poverty index and lack of employment is now a major problem in our zone,” Orbih said.

    While commending Governor Obaseki for impacting Edo through good governance, he urged him to take advantage of his second term in office to improve the developmental feats in such a way that future elections in the state and zone will be easier for the PDP.

    Responding, Governor Obaseki commended Chief Orbih for his efforts in uniting the people of the region, adding he has so far shown that his election as PDP National Vice Chairman, South-South, was well deserved.

    On NDDC,Obaseki, while agreeing with Orbih, restated his earlier stand that the interventionist agency must be radically restructured to deliver on its original mandate, insisting that no project would be welcomed in Edo except it was done in collaboration with the state government.

    He, however, urged Nigerians to continue to believe in the country saying, “We should not lose hope in Nigeria but focus on how to create confidence to give our people hope by managing the country well. The challenges of insecurity just show the dysfunctionality of our federal system.”

  • “Combat Fake News or Be Consumed by It” – Dr. Ruth Oji on Press Freedom Day

    “Combat Fake News or Be Consumed by It” – Dr. Ruth Oji on Press Freedom Day

    As Nigeria joins the rest of the world to celebrate World Press Freedom Day, the nation, like many others,  faces pressing issues of combating fake news, fostering media accountability, and adapting to the digital age, among others. Against this backdrop, our correspondent, Tolu Adesina, met with Dr. Ruth Oji, a Senior Lecturer at Pan-Atlantic University and an expert on media language, for a no-holds-barred interview on the role of language in shaping press freedom and democratic engagement. Drawing from her research and work with the Solutions and Data Journalism Academy, Dr. Oji shared valuable insights into the evolving dynamics of media discourse and its implications for journalism in Nigeria.

    Interviewer: Considering your experience with the Solutions and Data Journalism Academy, how would you describe the most significant change in Nigerian media discourse over the past five years?

    Dr. Ruth Oji: Thank you for raising this important topic, especially today. Over the last five years, there has been a remarkable shift from monologic to dialogic journalism. Rather than passively consuming news, audiences now actively engage with it. My research shows that 78% of Nigerian news organizations purposefully incorporate reader feedback in real-time. Social media has birthed what we now call conversational journalism, where readers and audiences “talk their way through issues.” Additionally, hybrid newsrooms have emerged, with 65% of Nigerian journalists simultaneously producing content for traditional and digital platforms to reach diverse audiences.

    Interviewer: Social media is a major driver of news consumption. How has this shaped traditional journalistic language?

    Dr. Ruth Oji: Social media’s impact has been transformative. Headlines, for instance, are now crafted to be shareable on platforms like Twitter, making them more conversational and engaging. Studies show that this approach increases audience interaction by up to 92%. Similarly, traditional journalism has adapted by adopting shorter paragraphs—sometimes just one or two sentences—and integrating multimedia elements such as videos and graphics to retain reader attention. These changes make the language more dynamic and accessible, ensuring that traditional journalism remains relevant in a digital-first era.

    Interviewer: Your research on television talk shows highlights interesting power dynamics. How have these evolved in the digital age?

    Dr. Ruth Oji: The digital age has democratized media discourse. Citizen journalism now accounts for 30% of breaking news, demonstrating a shift in power from institutions to individuals. We no longer rely solely on traditional media to deliver breaking news. In fact, 82% of viral news originates from individual users, and 40% of traditional media stories are sourced from social media. This decentralization of power has enabled citizens to shape narratives, but it also requires vigilance to maintain credibility and trust. This is where some theories of communication and language become so, so important to anyone who is going into mainstream journalism. Some of these so-called theories have become full fledged disciplines or fields of endeavor.

    Interviewer: Can you let us in to some of those?

    Dr. Ruth Oji: There are many of such, but as a trained linguist, I will say pragmatics. That is the study of how context influences the interpretation of meaning in communication. The focus in pragmatics goes beyond the literal meanings of words and sentences to explore how people use language in real-life situations. For example, how tone, body language, and cultural norms affect the way messages are understood; understanding the speaker’s intention, relationship between the speaker and listener, and the situational factors that influence communication, are all concerns being addressed in that field.

    Interviewer: With misinformation on the rise, how can pragmatic analysis help combat fake news?

    Dr. Ruth Oji: Pragmatic analysis is invaluable. AI-powered tools now detect fake news with an accuracy rate of 87%, using linguistic markers such as urgency cues, emotional language, and verification prompts. For example, phrases like “Please RT for visibility” or “Can anyone else confirm?” are pragmatic indicators that help identify misinformation. By analyzing context and linguistic patterns, we can significantly reduce the spread of fake news.

    Interviewer: As a media trainer, what do you see as the biggest challenge for journalists in today’s environment?

    Dr. Ruth Oji: Journalists today face immense pressure to publish quickly, often at the expense of accuracy. Verifying sources takes time, and in a competitive environment, this creates a tension between speed and reliability. Additionally, adapting to digital platforms and maintaining cultural sensitivity in global reporting remain critical challenges. These require journalists to continuously evolve their skills and approaches.

    Interviewer: Finally, looking ahead, what changes do you predict in Nigerian media language over the next decade?

    Dr. Ruth Oji: We are likely to see a hybrid evolution of Nigerian Pidgin and English in mainstream media, catering to younger audiences who favor blended languages. Micro-content formats and infographics will also dominate, replacing text-heavy formats to improve engagement. Moreover, there will be a push for preserving indigenous languages alongside global connectivity—a balance I describe as “glocal” storytelling. Journalists will integrate AI tools to craft content more efficiently, and multi-modal storytelling will become the norm.

    Interviewer: Thank you, Dr. Oji, for sharing these important perspectives with us.

    Dr. Ruth Oji: It’s my pleasure. Thanks for having me. But let me quickly add that a day like this reminds us all to commit to fostering a free, accountable, and innovative media space, as it is vital for our democracy and collective progress.

  • Three feared dead as communities clash in Delta

    Three feared dead as communities clash in Delta

    By Polycarp Orosevwotu, Ughelli

    No fewer than three persons were alleged to have been killed over a clash between two communities of Ekiugbo and Otor-vwreko of Ughelli North local government area of Delta state following the alleged imposition of N5, 000 fees on traders.

    A source, who pleaded anonymity, named the deceased as John Mark, Odibo and a yet-to-be identified person.

    The source said the incident occurred on Thursday afternoon when youths from the Otor-vwreko informed they will henceforth collect fee of N5, 000 from those trading along the walkway.

    READ ALSO: Cultists kill Delta polytechnic graduate

    The source said the neighbouring Ekiugbo community challenged the announcement, leading to a free-for-all.

    The source said: “While the argument between the two communities heightened, from nowhere, we started hearing gunshots ranging in the air and the whole market was in total disarray as many traders left their stores and goods scampering for safety.

    “Not quite a few minutes later, information filtered out that about three persons from Otor-vwreko including the son of the oldest man reported to have killed during the clash between the two communities.”

    It was learnt that Ekiugbo and Otor-vwreko communities of Ughelli North had witnessed several clashes in the past over alleged imposition of market levies.