Tag: media

  • New media as platform for terrorism

    It is almost impossible to predict the act of terrorism because it has moved from being carried out in the conventional way of operation to using the new media such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, amongst others, to recruit, convince and interact with youths that are mostly glued to social media.

    The rapid growth of new media communications technologies is becoming a critical component in the operation and organisation of terrorist networks. While security-based concerns regarding the use of the Internet for cyber-terrorism (disruption of critical networks, etc) have somewhat subsided, there is growing recognition that both the Internet’s mass media function and its decentralised infrastructure play a crucial role in modern terrorist organisations.

    Internet technologies are being deployed in innovative ways by terrorist groups, from the creation and maintenance of encrypted traffic over rapid and untraceable networks to transmitting alternative news broadcasts. The Internet is serving both as a forum for the training of subterfuge and as a means of conducting that subterfuge, both as a vehicle for dispensing information about terrorism and for coordinating the logistical and financial resources to conduct that terrorism. Additionally, the Internet provides a valuable space for the location and integration of new recruits. New communication technologies are presenting violent groups the means to both target particular audiences as well as reframe their messages independent of the mainstream media for a broader audience. These dynamics together pose new and formidable challenges to domestic and international policy-makers. After a series of properly coordinated Christmas bombing in Kano in 2011, Boko Haran terrorist group released a video statement defending their action to YouTube.

    The new media differs from traditional and conventional media in many aspects, such as in interactivity, reach, frequency, usability, immediacy, and permanence. Unlike traditional media that is characterized as “one-to-many,” in which only a small cohort of established institutions disseminates information to an effectively limitless audience, social media enables anyone to publish or access information. New communication technologies, such as comparatively inexpensive and accessible mobile and web-based networks, create highly interactive platforms through which individuals and communities share, co-create, discuss, and modify content. With social media, information consumers also act as communicators, vastly expanding the number of information transmitters in the communication market. This two-way communication promotes creation of small, diffused sets of communicators and groups. Virtual communities using social media are increasingly popular all over the world, especially among younger demographics.

    Terrorists use social media because they are by far the most popular with their intended audience, which allows terrorist organizations to be part of the mainstream. Social media channels are user-friendly, reliable, and free as well as allow terrorists to reach out to their target audiences, which is in contrast to older models of websites in which terrorists had to wait for visitors to come to them.

    Just as marketing companies can view members’ information to find potential customers and select products to promote, terrorist groups can view people’s profiles to decide whom to target and how to approach each individual thereby giving them the opportunities to carry out their purpose of propaganda, radicalization, and recruitment. Social networking sites allow terrorists to use a targeting strategy known as narrowcasting.

    Facebook is the largest online social network. As of January 2014, it had 1.31 billion users, of whom most (54percent) log in on a regular basis and almost half (48 percent) log on in any given day. Their average age is about 30 years. In the Middle East, Facebook has seen a significant membership increase and reached 67 percent penetration in 2010, and in Asia overall, 23 percent. Terrorists, noting the trends, have set up their Facebook presence.

    Twitter has recently emerged as terrorists’ favourite Internet service, even more popular than self-designed websites or Facebook, to disseminate propaganda and enable internal communication. Terrorists use of Twitter take advantage of a recent trend in news coverage that often sacrifices validation and in-depth analysis for the sake of almost real-time coverage. Under these conditions, especially when there are few options, mainstream media may take tweets as a legitimate news source. Terrorists repeatedly and methodically exploit this shortcoming for propaganda purposes.

    More and more applications interconnect the different services and extend the possibilities of conveniently sharing material. Lately, Instagram and Flickr, two applications for editing and sharing pictures and videos, have gained great popularity among the mainstream audience. By the end of 2013, Instagram had 150 million active monthly users, more than 60 percent of whom were from outside the United States, who shared 55 million pictures each day on average. Flickr offers a web service which allows users to upload photos and videos to its website, and, if desired, to their social network profiles. By March 2013, Flickr counted 87 million registered users and approximately eight billion photos.

    Terrorists have long used the Internet for purposes that range from recruitment, propaganda, and incitement to data mining and fundraising. They have turned to the new media not only because counterterrorism agencies have disrupted their traditional online presence but also because the new media offers huge audiences and ease of use. Terrorist followers, sympathizers, converts, and newcomers also find in the new media a much lower threshold to access terrorist-produced and terrorism-related content than they faced in discovering and signing up for access to the hardcore forums (those which have not been shut down, at least). This trend is combined with the emergence of lone wolf terrorism: attacks by individual terrorists who are not members of any terrorist organization.

    The meteoric rise of social media has let radical groups and terrorists freely disseminate ideas through multiple modalities, including websites, blogs, social networking websites, forums, and video sharing services.

    Cyberspace, with its numerous and emerging online platforms, presents new challenges and requires dramatic shifts in strategic thinking regarding national security and countering terrorism. Despite the growth of internet research in recent years, it has not yet provided efficient strategies or fruitful counter measure devices or tactics such all users of the media need to be careful while making use of it, most especially youths.

    • Esigbemi is a student of University of Benin.
  • NUJ urges FG to enhance media salary in Nigeria

    NUJ urges FG to enhance media salary in Nigeria

    The Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ) on Friday urged the Federal Government to enhance media salary because “journalism deserves better care like other professions”.

    The union’s National President, Mr Waheed Odusile, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Yenagoa that improving on media wellbeing would go a long way in enhancing performance.

    Odusile decried the way graduates working in the government owned media were being treated, describing the media as strong body in nation building.

    “What we want from the government is a kind of enhancing the salary of journalists; let it start first with our members and colleagues in government media because the bulk of members are government employees.

    “We do not like the way our members are being treated like other civil servants in the country; you and I know that journalist works round the clock; let the salary and other benefits go in line with the nature of the job we do.

    “Let the benefits reflect the work we are doing; if other professions are recognised, journalism should also be recognised in this country.

    “Well, once we achieve better pay for journalist in the government media, we will move on to negotiate with the private media owners because we are doing a lot for national development.

    “In this process, we are not going to relent on negotiating with the government to achieve our goals.

    “On the issue of fake journalists, I think, we need law that can wipe them out; we want every fake journalist arrested to be punished according to the law.

    “There should also be a law protecting journalism in this country; journalism as profession should be reorganised and protected,” he said.

    NAN recalls that the 11th All Nigerian Editors Conference (ANEC) is on-going in Yenagoa.

  • 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.”

  • Kalu urges Buhari to help reduce media cost

    Kalu urges Buhari to help reduce media cost

    Former Abia State governor, Dr.  Orji Kalu, has urged  President Muhammadu Buhari to come to the aid of the print media owners to avoid job loss due to increasing cost of production in the industry.

    Kalu, who spoke yesterday said  with the way things are in the print media, the industry is getting closer to the edge of the precipice, warning that it runs the risk of running at a loss because of the rising operational cost that is threatening the existence of most media organisations.

    He, therefore, appealed to the president to urgently intervene to prevent job cuts.

    ‘The operational cost media houses have to contend with is huge and keeps rising daily. “We are dying from the burden. Our businesses are suffering. From the cost of newsprint to ink, blankets and plates, our consumables in the print media are expensive. The Sun Publishing uses 2,800 tons of newsprint every month, for instance. Add that to the cost of freighting, the dwindling fortunes of the naira and power challenges and it becomes obvious that our business terrain is facing more difficulties by the day. The Federal Government needs to come to our aid. If this bad tide is not stemmed, media owners may resort to downsizing to save cost and that will further worsen the nation’s already bad unemployment figures,” Kalu lamented.

    He said all media houses are producing every copy of the newspapers Nigerians read at a loss.

    ‘The average cost of printing a copy of a newspaper is N500 and we sell for N150 or N200. That means media owners are subsidising every copy our readers get with N300. How long can we go on like that and stay in business? The government has to intervene to ensure journalists keep their jobs and we stay afloat,” he added.

    Kalu said the media industry deserves a special intervention fund from government at a reduced interest rate among other palliatives to carry on with the business of publishing.

    He urged other members of the Newspaper Proprietors’ Association of Nigeria (NPAN) to speak and lend their voice to this appeal to the government.

    “All members of NPAN must join this appeal. We all need to work together on this. It is our battle, it is about our survival and if we don’t work together, all our businesses are at risk.

    “For as long as our operational costs keep going through the roof,  the fortunes of newspaper houses will keep diminishing,” he warned.

  • Media: The log in our eyes

    Following widespread media reports about state governments owing civil servants’ salaries for months, especially in Osun State, I remember seeing a Facebook page post meant to justifiably mock some  media organisations.

    The post read: Hypocrisy is when a media house is owing staff salaries and is writing an editorial criticising state government defaulting in payment of salaries.

    Whoever came up with the post has good reasons to do so, considering the shocking salary debt profile of some media organisations in the country.

    Some broadcast and print media organisations in the country are as guilty as some state governments  for  failing to meet their obligations to their workers. A report by the Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ) shows that the salary debt ranged from five months to 18 months.

    Despite all efforts to get the concerned media organisations to pay up, they have refused to pay and continued to publish and broadcast as if the welfare of the journalists does not matter.

    The NUJ and the workers have been forced to resort to picketing some of the organisations in the hope that the managements will pay. Most times, the media owners have not been able to fulfil the terms of agreements reached with protesting workers.

    It is very ironic that some media houses in the forefront of campaigning for the payment of salaries and allowances of civil servants are not paying their workers. How can the concerned media organisations be taken seriously by defaulting governments and private organisations when they preach what they don’t practice themselves?

    If they knew better, they would have implemented their suggestions in their media organisations and shown other employers how to treat their workers better.

    What some media houses pay as salaries and allowances is poor enough compared to other sectors. Their inability to pay is a major indictment which they should be ashamed of instead of carrying on as if they are above the law.

    While media houses like others can complain about the down turn of the economy which has negatively impacted on their operations, there is no justification to subject affected journalists to the kind of hardship they have had to cope with due to non-payment of their salaries.

    What is apparent in some cases is that lack of proper management of human and financial resources is responsible for the sorry state the debtor media houses have found themselves. It is not that some of them are not making money that is enough to pay their staff and for operations, the problem is that they are not operating the proper corporate governance principles required for growing the business.

    I remember joining The Punch newspaper in May 1987, when the company was battling to survive. That the newspaper has grown to become the leading newspaper in the industry is a testimony to the efficient management which the company has become known for.

    If only some of the owners and management of some of the defaulting media houses can be more disciplined and subject their operations to due diligence, they will not find themselves in the mess they are today.

    The media houses are lucky that they are operating in a country like Nigeria where the labour law is not strong enough to penalise employers who don’t pay their staff. One of them who tried to publish in South Africa folded up in less than a year due to the stringent law that protects the interest of the workers.

    It is high time media houses which cannot pay their staff were shut down and stop pretending to be what they are not. Media organisations cannot continue to point out the speck in others’ eyes when we have logs in ours.

  • Some thoughts on media and terrorism

    Some thoughts on media and terrorism

    This year’s world congress and general assembly of the International Press Institute (IPI), the 63-year global press freedom advocacy organisation, took place in Amman, capital of Jordan, between May 19 and 21. Few Nigerians may have heard of this organisation even though it partly funds the Nigerian Institute of Journalism, the country’s premier journalism trainer, and even though some of the most prominent Nigerian journalists and publishers including Alhaji Lateef Jakande who once presided over its affairs, Aremo Segun Osoba, Mr Sam Amuka, Mr Felix Adenaike, Malam Kabiru Yusuf and Alhaji Ismaila Isa, have been among its leading members.

    Naturally the organisation believes that press freedom is “the right that protects all other rights.” Consequently it has tried to defend press freedom everywhere in the world in several ways, including through its annual congress and general assembly where leading journalists, editors and media executives gather to discuss major contemporary issues.

    Among the variety of issues discussed this year were the aftermath of the Arab Spring, the terrible civil war in Syria, the safety of journalists reporting in conflict situations, the implications of internet regulation for democracy and press freedom and reporting on religion. This journalist was on a panel of three – the others were Steven Pollard, editor of the London based Jewish Chronicle and Monjuru Ahsan Bulbul, the CEO of a private television station in Dhaka, Bangladesh who was a last minute substitute for Jeffrey Sharlet, a contributing editor of Harper’s Magazine and faculty member of the Centre for Religion and Media, New York University, who failed to make it to Amman – which discussed the last subject. The moderator was Ms Maria-Paz Lopez, a senior religious writer with La Vanguardia, Spain, and chair of the International Association of Religious Journalists. A little bit more about this presently.

    Meantime a bit of my impression of Jordan. For me a more classic study in contrast between the country and Nigeria will be hard to find. Here’s a country in the middle of a harsh desert with no oil, no water, with a population of little over two million and in the frontiers of the Israeli/Palestinian conflict which is at the heart of so-called clash between the West and Islam. Yet a visitor to Amman and several of the towns and villages a few hours’ drive from it which we visited would be forgiven if he mistook them for towns and villages in advanced Europe or America. All the highways we travelled along were tarred, all the towns and villages we visited had electricity and water and not once did the lights go out throughout our stay in Amman.

    Of all the barren country’s advances in spite of an almost total lack of natural resources none fascinated me like its ability to provide water to all its inhabitants. According to Nasiru Aminu, a senior diplomat at our Amman embassy and a friend, in all his several years in Jordan the taps in his house have never gone dry. Yet, the country, he said, relies almost entirely on harvesting rain water.

    However, for me even more interesting than the ability of the country to satisfy the water needs of its inhabitants in the middle of a desert was the pattern of water supply among the poor, middle and high income neighbourhoods of the towns; the poor are supplied daily, the middle thrice weekly and the rich only once, said Nasiru. Here in Nigeria the reverse would’ve been the case.

    The secret of Jordan’s relative wealth, said Nasiru, is its investment in the education of its people. This is evident from the country being a leading destination of medical tourism in the world, raking in more than two billion dollars annually. It is also the Information Technology capital of the Arab Middle East.

    Jordan is, of course, no El Dorado. As a kingdom, and for that matter one on the frontiers of the Middle East conflict, its citizens can do with a lot more freedom than they have. I am certain, however, that few Jordanians, if any, would want to exchange their relatively gilded cage for Nigeria, the majority of whose citizens have been left free to live in abject and grinding poverty, almost totally abandoned by a state whose officials are generally too venal, selfish, power-hungry and incompetent, etc, to give a damn about public opinion.

    Back to the IPI congress and general assembly, the liveliest session for me was none of the eight that were held between the morning of May 20 and the evening of the following day. The liveliest for me was the pre-congress town hall meeting in the evening of Sunday May 19 moderated by the well known CNN International anchor and correspondent, Jim Clancy. The subject looked simple enough; “Who is a journalist?” However, not surprisingly, the answer proved elusive. The debate that followed the introductory remarks of the four panellists on the questions whether in today’s digital age where anyone with a computer or a mobile phone who can send pictures and stories to news outlets and bloggers can be called journalists was truly hot and in the end there was no single answer.

    There was, however, one interesting remark from the floor which was that today’s so-called “citizen journalism” was making mainstream journalists lazy by giving them an excuse to abdicate their responsibility for cross-checking the accuracy of news items before publishing. This, said the gentleman who made the remark, bodes ill for the future of professional journalism. I couldn’t agree more.

    Finally to the discussion on reporting religion of which I was a panellist. My submission was that the dominance of the Nigerian media by the private sector in spite of the heavy presence of government in the broadcast media – a private sector dominance which, for historical reasons, does not reflect the ethnic, regional and religious plurality of the country – has led to a reporting culture which is heavily biased against Muslims and Islam. This, I said, was in turn a reflection of the global media which has been essentially anti-Islam.

    Nowhere is this bias as glaring as in the reporting of Boko Haram insurrection which has caught the attention of the world because, of course, Nigeria, with at least 160 million people, is one of the most populous in the world and the biggest in Africa, reportedly almost split in half between Muslims and Christians, and because, of course, Nigeria is a leading world oil producer. The evidence of this anti-Muslim and anti-Islam bias of the Nigerian media is pretty clear in the way it has grossly under reported the human rights abuses of ordinary law abiding Muslims by the military and security forces in their fight against Boko Haram.

    Two recent reports by Adam Nossiter, the West African correspondent of The New York Times, have captured this journalistic blind eye like no other. The first in May entitled “Bodies Pour In as Nigeria Hunts for Islamists” and datelined Maiduguri, made very grim reading.

    “A fresh load of battered corpses,” Nossiter said in his introduction, “arrived, 29 of them in a routine delivery by the Nigerian military to the hospital morgue here. Unexpectedly, three bodies started moving. ‘They were not properly shot,’ recalled a security official here. ‘I had to call the J.T.F.’ — the military’s joint task force — ‘and they gunned them down.’”

    Nossiter’s second story this month in the wake of President Goodluck Jonathan’s declaration of emergency in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states makes as grim reading as the first, perhaps even more so. “The first independent accounts of the military offensive (since the emergency)”, said Nossiter, “spoke of indiscriminate bombing and shooting, unexplained civilian deaths, night time roundups of young men by security forces.”

    You will search most of the Nigerian media in vain to see any expression of concern about this indiscriminate use of force by our security forces in their war against Boko Haram terrorism. Certainly you would not see the sort of vehemence with which the media rightly condemned the Odi and Zaki-Biam massacres of the Obasanjo’s era. Yet what has happened in the North-eastern strongholds of Boko Haram is worse than the two combined, if only because both were one-off military invasions.

    In a recent well argued defence of President Jonathan’s state of emergency declaration in the region, the respected constitutional lawyer, Prof Ben Nwabueze, called it “a masterstroke indeed.” Without debating the merit of his position – this is a matter for possibly another occasion – it is obvious that the professor believes the consequential military operation against Boko Haram will bring a definite, if not quick, end to its terrorism, regardless of how the soldiers go about their operation.

    The professor’s “masterstroke” only reminded me of what President George Bush Jnr said when he invaded Iraq. It was, he said, going to be a “cakewalk”. Today, we all know that it was anything but. Right here at home the late President Umaru Yar’adua said more or less the same thing when he sent the soldiers after the sect in 2009. This too has, sadly and tragically, proved anything but a cakewalk.

    It seems to me the lesson of relying mainly on the use of indiscriminate force to solve a problem even as criminal as terrorism, whatever its variety, has not been learnt by our leaders and media pundits. Certainly the Nigerian media has not used its freedom as a shield that, to rephrase IPI’s principal objective, should be used to protect the rights of others.

    •This article was first published on
    June 12, 2013
    •Mohammed Haruna returns next week

  • Media seige on Abia: The limit of indulgence

    Media seige on Abia: The limit of indulgence

    In the last couple of years, I have been involved in the media imbroglio between two prominent citizens of Abia state,  Dr. Orji Uzor Kalu and Chief (Senator), Theodore Orji, both past governors of the state. Although I am not an indigene of Abia state, my interest in matter goes beyond my understanding of the limit to which media practitioners can allow themselves to be used by politicians to settle personal or group scores. I shall return to this particular point – the perfidious recruitment of journalists for personal wars – but I think it is important to state that my interest arose first and mostly because I happened to have worked with the two ex-governors at a certain period.

    That was when  Dr  Kalu, was governor with  Senator T. A. Orji his (Kalu’s) Chief of Staff. I was not a formal appointee of the administration but I was sufficiently close to the governor, and inevitably the Chief of Staff. I did a lot of media errands for  Kalu especially at the period he was having problems with some members of the Abia political elite. I stood behind him when some highly respected citizens of the state took advantage of their closeness to the media to harass him. For example, let me repeat my narrative of my encounter with Chief Ojo Maduekwe, who was then a minister of the federal republic of Nigeria.

    Maduekwe, to the chagrin of many, formed the habit of always taking on Kalu on the pages of newspapers nearly on a daily basis. And it got to a stage when I had to do an article with the title, “Minister of Orji Must Go”. Of course, the article received ovation at the Government House, Umuahia but, conversely, did not go down well with the minister who promptly complained to our mutual friend, Chief Hope Uzodinma, now a  Senator.  Uzodinma called me on telephone and had the following message for me: If you love yourself, you must see me immediately. I had to travel with a night bus from Owerri back to Abuja to see Uzodinma and the same evening, we went to see Chief Maduekwe, who was then the Minister of Transport, at Dipchirma House (or something like that) in Central Area, Abuja.

    I had known  Maduekwe, who remains today a role model for me, long before Dr. Kalu became governor. Naturally, he expressed surprise that I could “be used” to make life uncomfortable for him. I reminded him of how much I regarded him but politely told him that he was the one making life uncomfortable for  Kalu who many of us, especially from Igboland, had so much admiration for. I told him that we (I) felt that he had better things to do as minister than always descend on  Kalu as he was fond of doing. To cut the story short, we agreed on a truce and I make bold to state that that was the end of  Maduekwe’s incessant attacks on his governor. Anybody who is in doubt should go and ask both men.

    When  Kalu had problems with his Deputy, Eyinnaya Abaribe, I was there and I did an article under the title, “Abaribe Should Resign”. I remember, Hon. Eziuche Ubani, who was then serving the then Speaker of the House of Representatives, calling me to advise that I should not set my foot on Umuahia if I loved myself. I can go on and on but one thing to note most importantly is that when we were doing all that,  Kalu had no newspaper of his own. It was for that reasons that I admonished our colleagues who got recruited to work in the newspaper he founded years later to take it easy once the fight between Kalu and his erstwhile friend, T. A. Orji began. Some of them heeded the advice and some did not. One of those who did or have not is Ebere Wabara.

    Two years ago, at the heat of the media fight, Wabara issued a press statement on behalf of Dr. Kalu and signed off as the latter’s media adviser. While reporting the story, the newspapers referred to him as an Associate Editor and member of the Editorial Board of the newspaper Dr. Kalu is publishing.

    I did make an intervention to ask whether it was professionally correct for one person to be special assistant to a politician and at the same time be on the highest editorial decision making organ of a newspaper published by that same politician. Of course, the matter on which Wabara made the statement concerned Dr. Kalu (his political boss and professional employer) and his quarrel with Senator T. A. Orji. I got several responses from colleagues as well as politicians who agreed that I was making a good point. But because the Nigerian media is wrought with more impunity than we even have in the political parties, Wabara continued with his antics.

    One thing later led to the other and there was this encounter he, Wabara, had with security agents who took him from his residence in Lagos to Umuahia where, according to the story, he was charged for sedition over, not surprisingly, something he wrote about Governor Orji and his administration. Hell was let loose in a section of the media where Wabara and his publisher dominated. The matter went to court and, according to reports, the charges were dismissed and Wabara became a free man.

    The proprietary or otherwise of the actions of Governor Orji is beyond the scope of this article but what is of concern to me is that Wabara has since thrown every sense of decency over board in his bid to get even with T. A. Orji. His weekly column in the newspaper published by his political cum professional benefactor is devoted chiefly on T. A. Orji even after the latter has left office as Governor of Abia state. Incidentally, Wabara is an indigene of the state. Those familiar with the column know that it is all about an unashamed solidarity with his publisher in the endless story of an “ungrateful” Orji who was brought out from prison and made a governor.

    I thought Nigerians had read enough of that until their newspaper became awash with the same issue (of from prison to government house) a few days before the expiration of the tenure of Governor Orji; which prompted me to do an article in which I sought to know whether the media siege on Orji and indeed Abia state will ever cease even when he leaves office.

    But for Wabara and his benefactor, no dice. In a recent column, he alluded to something like never going to forgive Orji after recounting the Lagos to Umuahia police saga. And I ask, forgive? What does it really matter if an Ebere Wabara cannot “forgive” a Theodore Orji? Is Wabara in a position to cause Orji any discomfiture even if the entire newspaper is handed over to him to do columns on Orji every day?

    My take on Wabara’s no-forgiveness talk is that he is suffering from a measure of timidity and lack of knowledge of what to do. The no forgiveness mantra lacks the type of sophistication expected of a supposedly seasoned journalist and writer like him. I ask, what is Wabara capable of doing to Orji, column or no column? By Wabara’s own admission, the matter for which he was charged was dismissed. Now, if he still feels wronged, the expectation from a fellow of his exposure and caliber is to take legitimate steps against Orji, such as suing the latter and the security agencies for damages or whatever.

    To use precious editorial spaces to talk about forgiveness or not forgiveness is at once timid and an abuse of privilege.

    In that article, Wabara gave notice that he will begin “a series” on Theodor Orji and how he ruled Abia State. Minus that we are dealing with a very queer situation where he writes for a paper owned by Orji’s “arch enemy” (really?) I do not think any newspaper proprietor or indeed the whole journalism practice, would condone such a thing – I mean putting a would-be target of a virulent attack on notice. And I ask our people in the industry, is that the way?

    I have written severally that Dr. Kalu and his media boys have taken the matter too far. As I noted in my previous article, the final victim is the entire Abia state not just Orji. Abia is the only state that has the misfortune of having a media siege laid on it by two of their own –And any discerning observer knows that they have since gone beyond their target. The entire Abia, not just Senator Orji, is the victim of this subterfuge.

  • What you should know about impact Journalism

    What you should know about impact Journalism

    “Local spark, global impact! 45 newspapers share solutions to world problems. Join the movement: #ImpactJournalism”

  • Media digital migration: Understanding the times

    Media digital migration: Understanding the times

    There is no denial that the future of the media is digital communication which became the concern for the Board of Directors, Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) during a recent meeting.

    The Board expressed worries over the seemingly lack of progress in the Digital Migration process in West Africa, especially in view of the internationally mandated deadline for all countries to migrate from analogue to digital broadcasting.

    Interestingly, more audience explore the digital space than majority of media professionals and the risk of this is that information is becoming less verifiable considering the level of internet saturation.

    On the other hand, a few of those who are apparently able to use digital communication among media owners and practitioners may not even be well informed as to the ‘Dos and Don’ts’ of the cyber space.

    Meanwhile, there was an internationally mandatory June 17 deadline of migration from analogue to digital broadcasting, which is obviously not fulfillable.

    However, the Board observed that given the pervasiveness of television as a source of information for a large proportion of the population in West Africa and prevalence of analogue television sets in the region, the obvious inability of countries to meet the agreed deadline has potentially serious implications for access to information and freedom of expression in the region.

    These concerns of the MFWA’s Board are contained in an 11-point Resolution adopted at the end of its two-day meeting held in Benin Republic on Friday, May 29.

    “The Board also expresses deep concern about the low level of public awareness of the digital migration process and calls on the media and civil society groups in West Africa to support public education efforts to prepare citizens in their respective countries for the digital migration,” the Resolution noted.

    The Resolution urged governments in West Africa to prioritise the safety of journalists in accordance with the UN General Assembly Resolution on the Safety of Journalists and the Issue of Impunity, and the recent UN Security Council Resolution on the Safety of Journalists.

    The Security Council Resolution (Resolution 2222) adopted on May 27, 2015, urged Member States of the United Nations to create and maintain, in law and in practice, a safe and enabling environment for journalists, media professionals and associated personnel to perform their work independently and without undue interference.

    The Board’s Resolution also covered other critical issues relating to freedom of expression and press freedom in the West Africa region including concerns about lowering professional standards among the media in the region, the need for states to decriminalise defamation and the need for governments and regional bodies in West Africa to make significant investments in ICTs and work collaboratively to promote internet rights and freedoms.

    Consequently, the ways and manners of accessing information have fast moved from analogue to digital. It is therefore worrisome to discover that media houses still do not understand the times.

    Perhaps, it could be possible for media practitioners to relate with the magic of digital communication when they consider copies of their newspapers sold and returned or when they measure audience viewership for the broadcast folks.

  • Dentsu Aegis Network, Media Fuse Nigeria partner

    Dentsu Aegis Network, Media Fuse Nigeria partner

    Dentsu Aegis Network, Media Fuse Nigeria partner

    A leading marketing outfit, Dentsu Aegis Network, quoted on the London and Tokyo Stock Exchanges, is set to boost the media sector through major investments in Media Fuse Nigeria Limited, writes ADEDEJI ADEMIGBUJI.

    When everyone thought the era of affiliation in the marketing communication industry was fast becoming a fading fad, a major investment announced in Nigeria last week has proved this wrong.

    Dentsu Aegis Network, a global marketing conglomerate quoted on both London and Tokyo Stock Exchange and a media agency, Media Fuse Nigeria, established by Mr. Emeka Okeke,  have entered into a deal to deepen its global expansion drive.

    The partnership is an eye on emerging market-leader in the African market, especially Nigeria where the population of consumers is irresistible, plus an economic growth predicted about seven percent yearly and the digital and media landscape increasing by an estimated 15 per cent in 2014 alone.

    With acquisition sprees across Africa by Dentsu, Media Fuse will now operate as Media Fuse Dentsu Aegis Network, joining the strong network of Dentsu Aegis Network brands such as Carat, iProspect, Isobar, Posterscope and Vizeum in sub-saharan Africa.

    According to Okeke, the joint venture conforms to the new reform by Advertising Practitioners Council of Nigeria (APCON) on foreign investment in Nigeria, saying Media Fuse has a majority stake in the business ownership configuration.

    He said Media Fuse was incorporated in 2013 and launched its services in the market in January the following year.

    “The agency is registered as an indigenous national media agency having obtained a national operating licence from APCON. The agency broke its first campaign in February 2014 with the launch of the Swedish online classified ads service-tradestable.com having won the business in a keenly contested media pitch. As the agency continues its drive to deliver compelling services in the marketing communications industry, its operations received a boost with the keen interest shown in the business by global player Dentsu Aegis Network resulting in acquisition of equity interest in the business in July 2014 and subsequent change of name of the company to Media Fuse Dentsu Network Limited,” he said.

    He said further that the merger marks the dawn of new era in marketing communications in Nigeria with a young indigenous media agency getting the attention of a global network in foreign direct investment with full access to tools, capacity building, specialist agencies offerings in digital marketing, digital performance, Out-Of-Home (OOH) specialist offerings in strategy and planning as well as convergence planning through the flagship power brands of Carat, Vizeum, Isobar, I-Prospect and Postercope.

    Media Fuse Dentsu Aegis Network will be led by Okeke, who has worked in some West African countries, such as Nigeria, Ghana, Cameroon, Senegal, Cote d’ Ivoire, Sierra-Leone, Gambia and Liberia.

    Emeka and his team of 25 are bringing to the table a market known for reputation, a passion for the industry and a vision to grow clients’ brands and through the deal with Dentsu Aegis Network.

    Established associations between Media Fuse and the Carat-Adams affiliates in Ghana and Senegal, as well as relationships with key Dentsu Aegis Network global clients, highlights the immediate strengths and opportunities of the new partnership.

    Though the global network will contend with its global competitors, such as WPP, Publicis, Omnicom Group’s OMD whose affiliates in Nigeria advert agencies are leaders in various market categories, such as advertising, public relations, experiential marketing, outdoor and media independent businesses but the Chief Executive Officer Dentsu Aegis Network Sub-Saharan Africa, Mr. Dawn Rowlands, said the network was ready to compete for business considering that it’s a global market leader in digital marketing.

    “Our plan is to invest in a way that we invest. There is a push from our clients to invest in emerging market, especially Nigeria. We see that digital marketing will be 80 to 90 per cent of our business in the new market. We see opportunities in Nigeria to challenge for business. We want to collaborate with the media and our partners that we have chosen the right agency. We are here to challenge for business. In digital leadership rating in the world, we are the leader with 43.8 per cent rating, followed by Publicis with 38 per cent, WPP 35 Percent and Havas 26 per cent,” he said.

    Meanwhile, before the merger was consummated, Media Fuse parades blue-chip media accounts such as Procter & Gamble West Africa (English and Francophone), MasterCard, Adidas, Philips, Old Mutual and tradestable.com.