Tag: Dapo Olorunyomi

  • Africa risks new era of data colonialism, Olorunyomi warns at CJID media conference

    Africa risks new era of data colonialism, Olorunyomi warns at CJID media conference

    Chief Executive Officer of the Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development (CJID), Dapo Olorunyomi, on Monday, warned that Africa is drifting toward a dangerous new form of exploitation – data colonialism, unless governments, regional blocs, and civic institutions urgently rethink how democracy, development, and digital governance are pursued in the coming decade.

    Speaking at the opening of the third edition of the Media Development Conference (MDC-03), Olorunyomi said the continent is at a “historic crossroads,” where its democratic fragility, economic vulnerabilities, and the rapid expansion of global tech power threaten to reshape its destiny if left unmanaged.

    The event, held at the Abuja Continental Hotel, drew more than 300 delegates from across the ECOWAS sub-region, Central Africa, Namibia, and South Africa, making it one of the largest media-development gatherings on the continent.

    Olorunyomi’s central warning reverberated through the hall: after the extraction of land, labour, and minerals, Africa now stands at risk of having its data – the behavioural and digital footprints of its citizens – exploited by foreign technology giants.

    He described the trend as a “civilisational threat,” marked by intrusive surveillance systems, weak data protection laws, foreign-controlled platforms, and algorithms that discriminate against African users.

    “A continent historically subjected to extraction cannot afford a new era in which its data becomes the next frontier of exploitation,” he cautioned.

    The next decade, he argued, will determine whether Africa becomes an architect of its digital future, or remains “a passive recipient of other people’s technologies and decisions.”

    The CJID boss painted a stark picture of a region facing rising civic anxiety, shrinking civic spaces, coups, constitutional manipulations, and plummeting trust in public institutions.

    “Democratic reversals – once a matter of doubt – now demand new forms of regional response,” he said.

    For him, democracy must be rebuilt on transparency, participation, civic empowerment, and institutions that “listen and learn.”

    He stressed that elections alone do not constitute democracy, insisting that Africa must rebuild trust and strengthen regional bodies charged with protecting constitutional order.

    Olorunyomi expressed grave concern over the state of independent media on the continent, saying it is “under unprecedented strain.”

    With declining advertising revenue, diminishing donor support, and escalating censorship – both traditional and digital – he said that African journalism is struggling to survive even as the demand for trustworthy information grows.

    “The media is not a luxury – it is the oxygen of democracy,” he said.

    He listed urgent reforms, including sustainable business models, public-interest funding, AI-supported fact-checking, digital safety training, and civic literacy programmes.

    “These are the issues this conference will interrogate in the next three days,” he added.

    Olorunyomi pointed to countries such as India, South Korea, Singapore, Indonesia, Brazil, and Chile, noting that they offer clear models for Africa on data governance, digital identity systems, online rights, and transparency reforms.

    He urged African governments to invest in sovereign data infrastructures, ethically governed digital ecosystems, and regional regulatory frameworks that protect citizens without stifling innovation.

    Reaffirming CJID’s focus on young people, he spotlighted the Campus Reporter programme, active in 34 Nigerian universities and set for expansion into 13 countries next year.

    Africa’s youth, he said, are already shaping the continent’s future through fintech, agritech, health tech, and civic tech.

    “But they need policy protection, regulatory clarity, and access to regional markets to scale their innovations,” he noted.

    Olorunyomi ended on a hopeful but urgent note, saying the next decade presents Africa with a rare opportunity to define its place in the world – if leaders act with vision.

    “We possess the knowledge, the talent, and the demographic strength,” he said.

    “If we act with courage and govern with humility, Africa will not simply take part in shaping the next decade – it will help define it.”

  • ‘Data key to modern journalism’

    ‘Data key to modern journalism’

    Publisher of Premium Times Newspaper and Founder of the Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development (CJID), Dapo Olorunyomi has said data is key to journalism of the modern world.

    He spoke in Abuja during the launch of the Dataphyte Hub and the unveiling of the Dapo Olorunyomi Theatre (DOT).

    According to Olorunyomi, the whole purpose of writing, reporting and coverage is all about data.

    He said: “Data is central to the project of journalism of the modern time. All the stories that we do, we need to recreate, we need to use to achieve purpose. The whole purpose of writing, reporting and coverage is all about data.

    “Indeed, the reception of our messages is always about data, which above all, also, the whole infrastructure of how we put together the financing of journalism is all about data. So, in a nutshell, the epicenter of journalism, really, is all about data.”

    Read Also: CJID to launch two Artificial Intelligence tools to aid journalism practice

    African Country Director, MacArthur Foundation, Kole Shettima said: “Bringing data is one way of inclusive form of communication, because there are people who may not be able to read things, but they can see data and understand it.

    “But, more importantly, I think that data also helps to aggregate information that probably would take one a very long time to understand.”

    Founder and Publisher of Dataphyte, Joshua Olufemi said data provides the seed for development and growth.

    He said: “Data is the seed for insight. It is a seed for intelligence. It is the seed for reforms, change, development, and every need. if we’re able to have the right data, to help you interpret, why you made the decision you made, what decisions you make, why the things that are happening around us are happening.

    “I think that data just provides a seed of insight, knowledge and intelligence for livelihood for development and for growth as a whole.”