Tag: journalists

  • Journalists’ pay not so ridiculous

    SIR: I wish to debunk the claim made by your columnist, Olatunji Olopade, published in The Nation of Friday November 13 about the remuneration of journalists.

    He wrote that “The descent and humiliation of the journalist still persists in the hands of his employer; salaries still range from N15, 000 per month at entry level to N70, 000 per month at managerial level in most media organisations. Just three media houses endeavour to pay fairly and this has led to the metamorphosis of the journalist into an aberration of the watchdog he ought to be to society.”

    As an experienced journalist, I am not aware of any media house paying N15,000 as entry salary to pen-pushers and N70,000 to managers. His claim that only three media companies pay fairly well is totally false.

    Very many media houses have ‘fairly’ good pay for workers. We can talk of low pay, poor pay or non-regular payment of salaries to journalists as you have in some other professions, but to talk of N15,000 as entry package and N70,000 at managerial level for journalists is utterly ridiculous and completely false.

    Nonetheless, there is need for employers to increase the pay of not just journalists but other administrative workers in media establishments. Salary must be regular and paid as and when due. This will boost the morale of journalists and put them in a better position to fulfil their constitutional responsibility of holding government accountable to the people.

     

    • Johnson Adeniyi,

    Ilorin, Kwara State

     

  • Don seeks improved welfare for journalists

    Don seeks improved welfare for journalists

    The welfare of journalists should be prioritised by publishers and media owners to encourage best practice and professionalism. These were the words of Dr Andrew Ate, the guest lecturer at a programme organised by the Department of Mass Communication of the Adekunle Ajasin University at Akungba-Akoko (AAUA) in Ondo State.

    The lecture with the theme: Mass Communication: Past, present and future, marked the 10th anniversary of public lecture in the department.

    While noting that there was need to strengthen professionalism in journalism, the guest lecturer said the media’s future would be driven more by digital technology that is beneficial to the practitioners, academics and the society.

    He said:  “The future of Mass Communication is very bright. It is a profession for the future that would be practised more by sophisticated digital tools and creativity. New functions, trends and paradigms would continue to emerge for the benefit of mass media practitioners, scholars and the society in general. This is why we need to prepare ourselves for tomorrow.”

    Ate said entrepreneurial journalism should be given prominence in higher institution to encourage creative students make lawful money through blogging and information sharing. He said the new media had expanded the scope of journalism and made graduates of Mass Communication to be self-employed through activities on social media.

    Speaking earlier, the Vice-Chancellor (VC), Prof Igbekele Ajibefun, represented by his deputy, Prof Oluyemisi Adebowale, praised the staff and students of the department for sustaining the public lecture, which he said had exposed students to trends of Mass Communication.

    The VC said: “I celebrate the department for being a progressive entity of the university. I am elated to know that the public lecture has been sustained for 10 years. I commend staff and students for keeping the tradition of excellence for which the school is known. I encourage the department to continue to expose students to new aspect of Mass Communication.”

    The Acting Head of Mass Communication Department, Dr Babtunde Oyinade, pointed out that there was need to turn the department into a School of Communication to accommodate similar programmes. He revealed that the department would soon establish its graduate programmes to ensure students get adequate training in journalism.

    The event featured presentation of award to people whose efforts led to the development of the department. The immediate past VC, Prof Femi Mimiko, received award of excellence for leadership and media education development. Also honoured were Dr Rotimi Oladele, award of excellence for leadership and professionalism, Chief Dayo Duyile, award of excellence of media training and mentoring, and Mr Tokunbo Jegede, award of excellence for leadership and media partnership.

    The department also recognised its alumni with ambassador awards. They are Shola Ilesanmi, Felix Ochuko, Oladipupo Akinwunmi, Toyosi Olola and Mrs Sade Seye-Ojo.

    Making a speech on behalf of the awardees, Shola Ilesanmi, an ex-CAMPUSLIFE correspondent, praised the department for rewarding them. He said the awards would be a motivation for them to do more excellent works.

     

  • Abuja Resident Doctors Association warns: Sports journalists risk stroke without regular exercise

    The Chairman of Association of Resident Doctors, FCT Chapter, Dr. Olubanjo Akerele has urged sports journalists  to take physical exercise very important since their job is very demanding and sometimes takes more hours than usual in their dissemination of news and information to the citizens of the country.

    The ARD boss, in a chat with Sportinglife at the Old Parade Ground Stadium at the maiden edition of the association’s week where the ARD team defeated Prince and Princess team 1-0 in the final of the football event on Saturday, said it was high time sports journalists take their health situation very important. He said the best way to checkmate live threatening diseases like stroke is to exercise their body regularly.

    “Losing of weight apparently helps you to control  diabetes if you have it, it actually prevents diabetics, hypertension and invariably prevents stroke. I also want to tell you that physical exercise on its own helps your cholesterol to be better because you will burn more energy and then you will keep fit and your heart would be better.

    “Adding weight on its own is gradually becoming epidemic in Nigeria. Again you can see that the life expectancy of Nigerians is coming down. Recently, I had to review a patient and a young 34-year-old man had a stroke. It means that stroke in the young is growing.

    “It means that the traditional things that are responsible for stroke in the young are being changed to non-communicable diseases. This young man has been having diabetes for a very long time unknown to him. He told me that he was told that his sugar level was high in 2013 but did not take it serious,” he disclosed.

    Among the dignitaries that graced the competition  included the Director of Sports in the FCT, Mallam Musa Alim and Medical Director, Maitama General Hospital, Abuja, Dr. Adetoun Shotimeyin.

    “It is in our constitution that picnics and family refreshment are very important. So we included sports as part of our family refreshment and picnic. It’s just a way of appreciating the role of physical exercise and blending it into our programmes.

  • Teachers honour journalists, others

    Teachers honour journalists, others

    Five journalists were honoured by the Academic Staff Union of Secondary Schools of Nigeria (ASUSS) and Basic Education Staff Union of Nigeria (BESUN) for their contributions to the growth of the education sector last week.

    The groups presented awards to the journalists and two other citizens and 60 of the associations’ retirees during the World Teachers’ Day celebration, held at the Nigerian Army Officers’ Mess, Yaba, Lagos State, last Monday.

    The journalists honoured were: Mr Adegbola Adedigba, Senior translator, Bond F.M. 92.9, Lagos; Mrs Taiwo Omilani, Education correspondent, Leadership Newspapers; and Mr Abiodun Elugbaju, Radio Nigeria, who all got the Emerald Chamber of Tutors awards. Mrs Oluyemisi Ayodele, Producer, Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria (FRCN), got the ‘Rugby Chamber of Tutors’; while Mr Oyeniran Apata of Daily Independent, was presented the Diamond Chamber of Tutors’ award.

    Other recipients were Dr Uche Okeke, Registrar, Chattered Institute of Local Government and Public Administration of Nigeria, who chaired the occasion; and the guest speaker, Prof Victor Edun.  The retirees were decorated with broaches of the title of ‘Senior Citizen’ and got retirement benefits and cheques worth about N10 million.

    Speaking on the awards, ASUSS Chairman, Comrade Labaika Kazeem said: “These people are the ones that are promoting the image of the education industry. For the journalists, with their credible reportage and specialised reports, they help us to point the government and society to loopholes in the education sector and the individuals have contributed in no small way to education in this country. So, we felt the need to appreciate their efforts and tell them thank you.”

    Kazeem also called on government to confer recognition of ‘Senior Citizen’ on retired teachers and called for recruitment of more teachers to fill the gaps that exist in public schools.

    In his lecture, Edun, a Professor of Education at the Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU), Ago-Iwoye, called for an upgrade of the teaching profession through continuous professional development, higher remuneration and establishment of teachers’ licensing authorities.

    Speaking on the theme: ‘Empowering teachers, building sustainable societies’, he suggested that the teaching profession  should have a legalised Code of Conduct bureau, and that teachers’ councils should be run by teachers, rather than government.

    Edun emphasised the need for a proper standard of qualification in specified fields (primary, secondary or tertiary) for teachers before they are allowed to practice and to be allowed flexibility to switch specialisations, if they are not satisfied with their initial choice.

    Advising the teachers, the professor said: “Let us all fight corruption and fight for our rights, but before you can fight, you must position yourself to fight. You must ensure that you are competent and skilful and you can compete favourably with any other professional. You must ensure that you build yourself. The Council has identified what you need to do to be professional, so do it. If you position yourself properly, nobody can rubbish you.”

     

  • Buhari urges journalists to join anti-graft war

    Buhari urges journalists to join anti-graft war

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday urged journalists to join the fight against corruption.

    He said they should work towards strengthening the media because of its critical role  in democracy.

    The President spoke at the presentation of the book: 50 World Editors: Conversations with Journalism Masters on Trends and Best Practices, by Mike Awoyinfa and the late Dimgba Igwe.

    Buhari, who was represented by the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Information, Mrs. Oluseyi Abiodun, described the authors as “global models in journalism.”

    He praised the authors on the book, adding that Igwe’s tragic death was a huge loss.

    The authors started writing the book before Igwe was killed by a hit-and-run driver on September 6, 2014, near his Okota, Lagos, home.

    The President urged journalists to live by what the late Igwe stood for.

    “Igwe belonged to everybody, but belonged to nobody, because of his ability to call a spade a spade.

    “It is sad that he is no longer with us. He died as a true hero and a powerful columnist, who could not condone corruption, injustice and unrighteousness,”, he said.

    The President said the book launch was a fitting way to remember the late Igwe.

    “Today ought to have been a good one, where a renowned writer would have seen his dream come true, but all we have now are memories, the memories of a man that was cut short trying to keep fit and live long,” he said.

    He recalled the circumstances that led to Igwe’s death, saying: ”It is so sad that for over three hours, he was being moved from one hospital to the other until he bled to death. This is not acceptable in the new Nigeria.”

    He praised the authors’ effort and patience in making the book a reality, saying: “It is indeed a labour of love for journalism.”

    Buhari said the book, which took 10 years to produce, would be useful not only to journalists, but to politicians, administrators, among others, as it teaches practical journalism from experienced editors of famous media outfits across the globe.

    The President said he was pleased that five Nigerian editors were featured in the book.

    He described the book as a “story of a Nigerian dream’’, adding that the duo had mentored editors, publishers and managers in the media industry.

    According to him, the book was an epic writing that teaches journalism from the practical experiences of editors.

    He praised the authors for travelling globally to get notable journalists with wide experiences and knowledge, “which showed the book as a labour of love for journalism’’.

    The President said Igwe’s wife should be consoled that her husband died as a true hero and columnist, who could not suffer any act of corruption and injustice.

    “Igwe’s death is a parable for Nigeria, a country where security and impunity have become the norm such that somebody will commit a crime and believe that he will not be caught.

    “Tell the criminals that the long arm of the law will catchup with them soon. Even if you escape the judgement of man, you will not escape the judgement of God.’’

    He congratulated the authors for creating their own school of journalism, urging Nigerians to emulate how they related, in spite of coming from different ethnic groups.

    Buhari also advised other journalists to write books that would inspire people and add value to the growth of the nation.

    Former Ogun State Governor Aremu Olusegun Osoba, who chaired the event, urged kidnappers of  the wife of The Sun Deputy Managing Director Steve Nwosu, to free her.

    In an emotion-laden speech, he expressed concern about the kidnap of Mrs Toyin Nwosu, saying her abuductors should free her unharmed.

    Osoba also spoke about a programme aired on Aljazera that Nigerian journalists were beggars.

    He said: “It is unfortunate that publishers find it difficult to pay their young employees.”

    The former governor called on a collective effort to redeem the image of the media at the international level.

    Awoyinfa recounted their experience at The Concord, saying they were “masters in the act of casting headlines” and that their stories were as if they were “straight from the bible.”

    Awoyinfa read a long letter to his late friend, Igwe, saying not even time could heal the wound received as a result of his death.

    He said that the book was written because of the hunger, passion and love for the profession, expressing the hope that people could use it to gain knowledge.

    Awoyinfa said he would continue to launch a book every year in memory of Igwe.

    Scholar and essayist Prof. Adebayo Williams said the book should be a tribute to journalists, who were killed.

    The book’s reviewer, Mr. Eric Osagie, said the book shows that “journalism cannot simply be defined as history in a hurry.”

    He said the 682-page book talks about the passion and travails of international and local journalists.

     

  • Judge detains The Nation man, six others in Ogun

    Judge detains The Nation man, six others in Ogun

    Seven journalists were arrested and detained at the Ota High court premises for the better part of Tuesday on the order of a judge attached to the state High Court 1, Ota, Ogun state.

    The detained Journalists are Daud Olatunji (Vanguard), Samuel Awoyinfa (The Punch), Ernest Nwokolo (The Nation), Abiodun Taiwo (Daily Times) , Sulaiman Fasasi (National Pilot), Wale Adelaja (TVC) and Johnson Akinpelu (Alaroye).

    The seven were in the court premises by 11:44am to make an inquiry in respect of two cases involving victims of Pakoto demolition and killing in  Oke – Ore community, which were believed to have been listed for hearing Tuesday at the Ota arm of the Ogun state  Judiciary.

    The reporters who arrived in two vehicles, pulled up quietly opposite court 1 where other visitors had packed,   and they had hardly disembarked when a Police orderly who identified himself as Adeyemi Oluwaseun, accosted them, upon identification as pressmen, the Police officer returned to his duty post.

    But a minute later, the Assistant Court Registrar (ACR) – a woman, emerged and inquired in a hectoring tone about the reporters’ mission even as she demanded to see a letter of authority from the Chief Judge or a senior judiciary officer permitting them to enter the court premises.

    Unwilling to be persuaded that they are journalists in the court to carry out their constitutionally guaranteed jobs, she  dashed to the judge while the court was in session and when she emerged, she said the judge had ordered the arrest of the reporters, apparently she had misinformed him that they
    were filming the entire court premises.

    For three hours from 11:45am to 2:44am, the reporters were detained inside the administrative wing of the court during which one of them, who was having stomach upset, almost fainted following the psychological and humiliating experiences they were put through.

    But a poisonous snake that emerged from the bushy court premises and which eventually bite one of the male judiciary staff as well as causing not a small pandemonium and apprehension, forced the judge to send the journalists away after reprimanding them.

    The name of the judge could not be immediately ascertained but the birthday wishes on imposing cards sighted in his office, reads N. I. Agbelu.

    The judge said following the prevailing emergency, the Assistant Court Registrar had to see to the welfare of the staff to enable them attend to the emergency.

    While three of the staff rushed the victim to a state hospital in Ota for treatment, others stayed behind to hunt for the snake which slipped into one of the crevices at the staircase leading to the entrance of the ACR office.

    However, before the victim was rushed to the hospital, an improvise tourniquet was used to tie the affected leg at a position above the knee level while  over  a dozen incisions were also made on the leg with a razor blade to drain away the venom of the poisonous snake.

    But there was  palpable anxiety when the fear – striken judiciary staff sighted the victim’s blood rushing out from the razor cuttings and which had already started turning into dark colour in less than five minutes after the bite, causing them to make haste to rush him to the hospital before a grave harm is done.

    And before freeing the journalists by 2:44pm after they were herded into Judge’s office, and also spent 25 minutes lecturing them on what is public place in the eyes of the law, said the court is not a public place.

    He said: “I put you under arrest. You are under arrest. You will discover that this compound is fenced round, is that not so?

    “It is not on the major road that you can just come in.  If you are representing the public interest, you must know we have a head in this Court. I am a judge; I have an unlimited jurisdiction in the state.

    “I can even say somebody should be arrested without question, but in exercising my power, I have to inquire into many things.

    “You cannot say because you are representing public interest, you cannot just burst into any compound or burst into my house. You have a right as a journalist, but, where your own stops my own starts.

    “And if I am the owner of a house, I have a right to my privacy, fundamental right to privacy, because I want to educate you. If you want to infringe on my right that is where your own right stops which I am entitled to.

    “What I am saying is that judiciary has its own right too. You are infringing on our own right too. You don’t know?

    “A report came to me that some people invaded the court claiming that they are journalists filming the whole place.

    “It is not a local market and it not an open market, you are approaching the court. If you are interested in a particular matter in a company, will you just burst into the company, saying you are journalists?

    “That is what I am telling you. You don’t just go into a place and start filming and then say you are a journalist.

    “If we said you are trespassing into our land, do you have any defence answer me now?  I am telling you it is not a public place I am telling you, the court is not a public place.”

  • Editors to media owners: Don’t owe your workers

    Editors to media owners: Don’t owe your workers

    The Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) has urged some media owners to stop owing workers salaries.

    In a communiqué issued at the end of its conference in Yenegoa, Bayelsa State capital, the editors said journalists’ working conditions should be improved.

    “Media owners must ensure regular payment of salaries as well as provide improved working conditions commensurate with the efforts of media practitioners,” NGE said.

    The communiqué was signed by NGE’s president Garba Deen Mohammad and General Secretary Victoria Ibanga.

    About 300 Editors drawn from the print, electronic and online media across the country attended the conference which held from August 26 to 30 and featured presentation of papers from scholars and giants in the media industry.

    They include Professor Etannibi Alemika of the Department of Sociology, University of Jos; Executive Secretary, National Institute for Cultural Orientation, Abuja, Dr. Barclays Ayakoroma; and Editor-in-Chief of Vanguard Newspapers Mr. Gbenga Adefaye.

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo (SAN) was the Special Guest of Honour. He was represented by Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Information Dr. (Mrs) Folashade Yemi-Esan.  Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson was the Chief Host

    The editors urged the media to remain steadfast in their reportage of events as well as be facilitators and agents of the positive change that Nigerians desire.

    NGE said Nigerians must unite to build a nation that is prosperous and secure, irrespective of political, ethnic and religious differences.

    It said steps taken so far by the President Buhari-led government to tackle terrorism are commendable. It urged Nigerians not to politicise or ethnicise the war against the scourge, stressing that much more must be done by all stakeholders to ensure that every part of country is secure.

    On graft, NGE said: “The present administration’s war against corruption is commendable but that every effort must be made to ensure that it is not selective. Every Nigerian must support the battle to eradicate the monster which has adversely affected the country.”

    The communiqué added:  “Media practitioners must play their agenda setting role and make conscious effort to raise the level and quality of public debate by bringing issues of national interest to the fore.

    “Editors must strive continually to improve their skills and acquire new skills that would prepare them for life outside the Editorial chair. Editors must do more to bring about the change Nigerians are yearning for by playing the watchdog role assigned them by Section 22 of the Nigerian Constitution.

    “Nigerians must unite and support efforts of the government of President Buhari to revive the nation’s economy. There must be a conscious effort to re-orient Nigerians to embrace values that would bring about the desired change.

    “That the Governors’ Forum make more efforts to build synergy among themselves and function as a Peer Review Mechanism, for sharing experiences and learning from each other policies and programmes that would make their states better.”

    The editors praised President Buhari for appointing two past NGE presidents Mr. Femi Adesina and Mallam Garba Shehu as his Special Adviser and Senior Special Assistant, Media and Publicity.

  • Media groups demand release of detained Nigerian based journalist in Cameroon

    Media groups demand release of detained Nigerian based journalist in Cameroon

    Media groups in Cameroon and the Committee for the Protection of Journalists,
    ( CPJ) have condemned the arrest of a Nigerian based Cameroonian journalist, Simon Ateba who is being detained by the country’s military authorities on charges of espionage.
    The groups in separate statements demanded for Ateba’s immediate release.
    Ateba, a Cameroonian wo has worked as a journalist in Nigeria for over a decade, was arrested on Friday afternoon at the Minawao refugee camp and taken to Makolo in the far north of Cameroon and has been accused of spying for the Boko Haram insurgency group which is waging a Jihadist was in the north east Nigeria.
    The President of the Cameroon Journalism Trade Union, Dennis Nkwebo, condemned Ateba’s arrest as high handed, observing that the journalist had not committed any offence by going to report on activities there.
    “He is a Cameroonian even if he is working in Nigeria and he has not committed any offence by going to report the refugee situation at the camp. We condemn his arrest as he was arrested in the course of doing his legitimate journalistic work and demand his release”, Nkwebo stated.
    According to the Cameroon journalists’ union president, there is no law in the country which forbids any journalist from reporting the refugee camps. Nkwebo added that the military authorities even had no right to arrest anybody for going into the refugee camps since the facility is controlled and run by the United Nations High Commission for Refugees, UNHCR, and not the government.
    “I have gone there to report events there at the camp many times and even taken photographs and nobody stopped me,” he observed.
    He lamented that even local journalists suffer repression in the hands of the military authorities, noting that journalists in Cameroon had been dragged to military tribunals before for possessing information that the authorities think they should have shared with the government.
    “Freedom of expression is under attack in Cameroon and journalists in this country will continue to resist all attempts to supress the Press,”Nkwebo asserted.
    The President of the Cameroon Union of Journalists, Charles Ndi Chia condemned Ateba’s arrest and promised to do everything possible to effect his release as soon as possible.
    In its reaction, the CPJ, in a brief statement issued Saturday by its West African representative, Peter Nkanga, said that the journalist’s arrest and continued detention was uncalled for as he was doing legitimate business of reporting an issue of public interest.
    “Authorities should release Simon Ateba immediately and allow journalists access to the camp, and the people within, to report those stories of public interest which have remained shrouded in secrecy and underreported for too long,”Nkanga stated.
    Ateba was arrested at the Minawao refugee camp in the far north of the country at about noon on Friday and taken to Mokolo, some twelve kilometres away, where he was detained.
    He was in Cameroon to report on the conditions of refugees in the camp when he was arrested and accused of spying for the dreaded Boko Haram insurgency group.
    He said he had been told that he would be taken to Yaoundé, the Cameroonian capital, and handed over to the secret police to be tried for espionage.
    Dayo Aiyetan, executive director of the International Centre for Investigative Reporting, ICIR, which awarded a grant to Ateba to conduct the investigation, expressed worry that the journalist’s whereabouts are no longer known as nobody has been able to reach him since Saturday afternoon.
    “I was in contact with him even as he was detained but since about 4.00 pm or so I have not been able to reach him,” Aiyetan stated Saturday evening.
    He added that Ateba complained that he had not been given food or water for over 24 hours and had not been allowed to buy drugs to treat a feverish condition that developed after he was beaten by rain.
    When contacted over the matter, the Cameroon minister of information, Issa Tchiroma Bakary, said he was not aware of the journalist’s arrest. Although the minister was told that he had not been fed or given access to medication to treat a fever, the minister said that there was nothing he could do until Monday or Tuesday.

  • Journalists call for peace in Esan land

    The Esan Journalists Forum (EJF), an umbrella body for journalists from Esan speaking area of Edo State, has appealed to leaders and citizens to work for the peace, unity and progress of the area.

    The forum, which has its national headquarters in Lagos, made the appeal in a statement signed by its National President, Mr. Timothy Okojie-Ave.

    He called on the leaders of the zone which is politically known as Edo Central Senatorial Zone, to begin to speak with one voice if Esan land must attain a better position in Edo state and the country as a whole.

    He said: “Esan land is one that is seriously yearning for progress and development; and it is time for well-meaning sons and daughters of the area to roll up their sleeves and be ready to join hands together to build a zone that would become the pride of Edo state and Nigeria in no distant time.”

    The forum noted that the zone had remained challenged and neglected in spite of the many contributions of her sons and daughters to the development of the country.

    “For example, we all know that it was Chief Anthony Enahoro, a son of the zone,  that moved the much celebrated motion for Nigeria’s independence.

    “We are also conversant with the political sophistication and contributions of Esan people to the overall development of the state and the nation as a whole. We are hardworking, lovers of  peaceful co-existence and very rich in culture and tradition.

    “Beyond this, Esan land is blessed with various resources that can be effectively tapped to make the zone become a major destination point for people across the various states of the country and even the world at large,” the statement added.

     

  • Prepare for digital age, media chief tells journalists

    Prepare for digital age, media chief tells journalists

    Journalists must embrace digital journalism and platforms offered by the Internet to attract a larger audience, if they are to be relevant in the 21st century media business, the Managing Director of Independent Newspapers Limited, Mr. Ted Iwere, said yesterday.

    Iwere spoke while delivering a lecture entitled: “Today’s Newsroom, Tomorrow’s Newspaper: How to Survive and Thrive in the Internet Age”, organised in honour of the Publisher of Vanguard, Sam Amuka-Pemu, on his 80th birthday celebration.

    A book, Voices From Within: Essays on Nigerian Journalism in honour of Sam Amuka – which is a collection of essays by prominent Nigerian newspaper columnists was also presented at the event. It was edited by the Managing Director of Diamond Awards for Media Excellence (DAME), Lanre Idowu.

    The launch was chaired by former Ogun State Governor Chief Olusegun Osoba.

    Iwere said newspapers’ managers globally were at a crossroad on how to re-invent themselves in the face of alternative sources of news provided by the social media through the Internet.

    The Internet, he added, is one of the greatest innovations that have helped to advance journalism. But the media chief noted that the platform was the biggest threat to the survival of newspapers globally.

    Iwere said unlike newspapers, the social media could access and produce news free from the constraints of deadlines and the increasingly expanding online audience could access the editions of the newspapers for free.

    The guest lecturer said the challenges posed by the rising popularity of the Internet as the alternative source of news had ensured that the old mantra of “print first, digital second journalism” could no longer compete with the new demands of the online audience.

    Iwere asked: “What do the readers need? The online audience wants papers that won’t parrot what they already know on social media 24 hours ago. Practitioners must pursue a new vision, develop a multi-media mindset and unify the newsroom.”

    He added that for Nigerian newspapers to survive the onslaught of the new media, practitioners must embrace “the print last mindset”. The Internet, the media chief said, offered journalists the ability to do more, to build a bigger audience and to improve the reportage of events by adding audio and video platforms to the stories.

    Iwere said it was imperative for editors and media managers to step up their acts, by creating a digital newsroom, which must be mobile ready and have a responsive website.

    “News reports in the newspapers must move beyond just breaking the news, but involve analysis of the news and journalists must be multi-skilled: able to use the tools that the digital media offers,” the media chief said.

    The book reviewer, Prof. Ayo Olukotun, described it as “significant chronicles of landmark articles, rich insights on various aspects of journalism”.

    Among those whose articles feature in the book are Mohammed Haruna, Debo Adesina and Gbemiga Ogunleye.

    Dignitaries present on the occasion included Chief Phillip Asiodu, former member of House of Representatives Mrs. Abike Dabiri-Erewa, Editor of The Nation Mr. Gbenga Omotoso, The Nation Editorial Board Chairman Mr. Sam Omatseye, Mr. Dare Babarinsa and Gbenga Adefuye.

    Also at the event were Sam Nda-Isaiah, Eniola Bello, Nosa Igiebor, Debo Adesina, Ademola Osinubi, Prince Tony Momoh, Frank Aigbogun, Comfort Obi, John Momoh, Mike Awoyinfa, Felix Adenaike, Senator Bode Olajumoke, Louis Odion, Tony Iyare, Ayo Adebanjo, Muhammed Fawehinmi and Fred Agbeigbe.

    The Senate President, Senator Bukola Saraki was represented by his Deputy Chief of Staff Gbenga Makanjuola.

    The guests hailed Amuka-Pemu, describing him as a mentor and one of the finest columnists in Nigeria.

    Former Information Minister Prince Tony Momoh said the celebrator “is an unprecedented social critic who always managed never to get into trouble”.

    “This is because before he describes someone as ugly, he would first describe how ugly he is himself,” Momoh said.

    A former chieftain of the defunct National Democratic Coalition (NADECO), Chief Ayo Adebanjo, called on the veterans of journalism to ensure that they leave a legacy for the current crop of journalists.

    “Eighty per cent of the success recorded by NADECO were due to the journalists of the era. We didn’t give them envelopes to fight our cause. They were honest and forthright,” he said.

    But it was a vintage Amuka-Pemu, popularly called Uncle Sam, that took the spotlight when least expected. When asked to give his remarks, Amuka asked the audience to “rise up for prayers”.

    As the guests were contemplating if the veteran journalist was up to some antics, he confounded his audience by offering a most unusual prayer.

    He said: “May you live to be 80 years and above, may you have profound praises and tributes showered on you while you are alive and when you die, there will be nothing more to say to you.”

    He ended his remarks by screaming a popular refrain: “There is God o.”