Tag: media

  • Nigerian media celebrate World Music Day

    Nigerian media celebrate World Music Day

    •Okoroji advises on songs that unite

    From music of yesteryear to contemporary songs across different genres, and talks that center on sound and beats, radio and television stations in the country, yesterday, joined the rest of the world to celebrate the World Music Day.

    Although music has existed for as long as mankind has found its voice, choosing a day to celebrate the phenomenon is believed to have been originated from France in 1982.

    Tagged ‘Fete de la Musique’, the feast of music which marks the beginning of summer solstice, and is celebrated every June 21, has now spread to over 120 nations around the world.

    Although there is no known public gathering to mark the day in Nigeria, in Europe and America, musicians from all genres and all ages, amateurs and experienced performers, gathered to perform for free at various public places.

    Some Nigerians who took to the social media to express concerns about why the day was no so celebrated in Nigeria blamed it on the current crisis in the Performing Musicians and Employers Association of Nigeria (PMAN).

    Meanwhile, Chairman of a Copyright Society of Nigeria (COSON), a Collective Management Organisation (CMO) for music and sound recording in Nigeria, Chief Tony Okoroji, felicitated with musicians on the day.

    In his message, the former President of PMAN said “those of us who have been given the special gift to spread joy to mankind with our beautiful art of music must recognize that what we have is a rare privilege. At a time when many across the world are under tremendous stress and strife stares so much of mankind in the face, we must compellingly speak the language of music, the language of love, a language that knows no boarders and use our special gift to reduce hate, bring people together and put a smile on the faces of God’s children”

    Okoroji who recently released the song, “Happy Music” used the opportunity of the World Music Day to remind World musicians across Nigeria to understand that they have an important role to play in providing a soothing balm on the frayed nerves of many in the Nigerian nation and pouring cold water on the dangerous fire of hate being lit by some across the country. Chief Okoroji pledges that as Nigerian musicians deploy themselves as agents of peace across the country, COSON would continuously watch their backs.

  • Worrying state of the media

    The restructuring at the Continental Broadcasting Services Limited, owners of Television Continental (TVC) and Radio Continental, which led to the sacking of 145 staff should not have come as a surprise to workers of the company and anyone conversant with the state of the media, locally and globally.

    With the alarming dwindling income from advertising and sales, mass sack in media organisations, like any other industry struggling to cope with the dire economic situation of the country, shouldn’t have caught anyone unawares.

    Any organisation that is unable to earn enough to meet its obligations, including salaries and allowances, not to talk of profits for its owners, cannot survive for long.

    The true state of the Nigerian media is that most have been performing miracles by circulating and remaining on air.

    Before the downsizing at CBS, there have been many unreported job losses and delay and non- payment of salaries across media houses. Only very few media organisations pay commensurate salaries as at when due.

    While not attempting to rationalise the continuous sack of media workers, the truth of the matter is that it is indeed a case of sooner or later the decision to sack or close down operation will be taken.

    Apart from the economic situation in the country and the impact of new media, I share the view that some of the affected media houses would probably not have been badly hit as they are presently if they had not been overambitious in expanding their operations, recruited more staff than they needed and paid less attention to the threat of the digital media.

    I also agree to an extent that some of the media organisations are unnecessarily top heavy with disproportionate salary scale for management staff and other layers.

    Whatever the case may be, the media is presently at a crossroads with the certainty that more journalists may have to be laid off due to lack of adequate resources to sustain funding of media operations.

    More than ever before, this is the time for media houses to review their operations and reinvent their services. Media organisations have to become more multi-media and business like in their production. They need to try new business models.

    They cannot afford to continue to be limited to being print or broadcast houses, but must now operate as media companies that have the capacity to do what we are used to doing in a better and more dynamic way and explore other possible related businesses.

    Hard decisions have to be taken about their continued existence, including retaining, sacking and employing requisite staff that can take them to the next level in the media industry.

    At individual levels, journalists should come to terms with the reality that the media is a business that cannot survive on continuous injection of extra funds by owners who are not guaranteed any profit. Benefits in kind (influence) are not enough.

    Some journalists have either outlived their usefulness to their media houses based on lack of adequate new media knowledge for sourcing and disseminating information or become part of the excess staff considering reduced production level and they need to know that their time will soon be up.

    Even for some of those still needed and who are competent for their assignments, economic reasons may necessitate laying them off if they cannot be accommodated with the limited resources available to their organisations.

    Every journalist who wants to continue to be relevant in and out of their present media employment or private media business should acquire necessary skills for taking advantage of new opportunities on various traditional and new media platforms.

  • TOTAL RECALL MEDIA BRANCHES OUT

    AFTER seven years of operating in the Nigerian entertainment space, Total Recall Media Limited, a member of T.Recall Group (Nigeria, South Africa and United States), has announced the official commissioning of a state of the art event centre called Spectralinks.

    Situated in the heart of Imodi-Imosan, besides Pebbles Suites, Ijebu-Ode, Ogun State, Group Managing Director, Mr. Oluseyi A. Adebanjo, aka Seyi Moscow, described the venture as part of Total Recall’s expansion.

    “Event all over the world is a big business and with peculiarity to our clime where weddings, birthday parties, concerts, shows, religious activities and others are close to our people’s hearts, we can only say that we are still at the surface level. There is still a lot of opportunity to be maximized within that Industry. What Spectralinks represent is a 360 event activation platform which includes a 1,500 seater ultra modern event hall, mobile event activation all over the country, media production coverage, a premium lounge for special occasion, rentage of marquee, pole tent and others,” he averred.

    The official commissioning of the event centre, he revealed, is scheduled for noon, today.

    The event, he further added, is proudly supported by Media Guide, Eagles House Global Resources, Eight22 Limited, Pebblesgold Entertainment, T.Recall Group, Event Pataki, Skillful Xpression, Insta Booth, Mouthfull Catering, as well as Ogeyemi Music Band.

    Total Recall Media has produced exciting and innovative content across a variety of platforms for a broad range of end users in the media entertainment and brand industry.

    Among some of its award-winning contents are the sitcom, Two Sides of a Coin, Reel E, Buzz Live With Owen Gee, Lincoln’s Clan, E-Access and a host of others.

  • PTI students tour The Nation, other media houses

    PTI students tour The Nation, other media houses

    To learn the rudiment of print and broadcast journalism, members of Press Club of Petroleum Training Institute (PTI) in Effurun, Delta State, were in Lagos, last week, on excursion to five media houses.

    The campus journalists under the aegis of Actualizers’ Team visited The Nation, Encomium magazine, Raypower FM, Faaji FM and Africa Independent Television (AIT) to gather knowledge on journalism.

    The Nation Online Editor, Mr Lekan Otufodunrin, received the students to the company’s corporate headquarters. While conducting them round the facilities, Otufodunrin gave the press club members tips on journalism practice and code of ethics of a journalist. He also tutored the students on how to write news, feature and opinions stories. He advised the students to take advantage of CAMPUSLIFE, The Nation’s youth-focused platform, to hone their writing and journalism skills while in school.

    The student-writers moved to Encomium Magazine, where they were received by a senior reporter, Mrs Shade Wesley-Metiboguno, who represented the magazine’s Chief Executive Officer, Mr Kunle Bakare.

    Bakare charged the students to channel their journalism skills towards exposing corruption and misconducts on their campus. The magazine’s Deputy Editor, Mr Tade Asifat, advised the young journalists always get their facts before putting pen on paper.

    The students learnt about broadcast journalism when they visited Raypower FM, Faaji FM and AIT to round off the excursion. They also visited Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH), National Stadium, and Oniru Beach for fun.

    A member of the club, Ada Nwoke, an Industrial Safety and Environmental Technology student, described the experience as “interesting” and “educative”. She said: “It is an interesting and educative tour for me. I learnt many things about journalism.”

    Another member, Prosper Osakwe, an Electrical and Electronics Engineering student, described her experience as “eye-opening”, saying: “With all I have learnt, I am considering practising journalism after my graduation.”

  • Democracy: How media has fared since 1999

    Democracy: How media has fared since 1999

    The inaugural lecture of the Oba Adetona Professorial Chair in Governance in the Department of Political Science, Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye, Ogun State, was delivered last Wednesday at the Adeola Odutola Hall, Ijebu-Ode, by Prof. Ayo Olukotun. The professor of political communication spoke of the changing profile of the media and its role in promoting democracy since 1999. Deputy Political Editor RAYMOND MORDI was there.

    IN some of its finer and heroic moments since the return of civil rule in 1999, the Nigerian media have been playing an advocacy role to promote good governance, human rights and democratic values. For instance, one of the important battles fought by the media during the period was its vehement opposition to the attempt by former President Olusegun Obasanjo to secure a third term mandate, contrary to the provisions of the 1999 Constitution.

    That was how a professor of Political Communication, Ayodele Olukotun, described the contribution of the Nigerian media towards the advancement of democracy since 1999. Olukotun gave this assessment while delivering the inaugural lecture of the Oba Sikiru Adetona Professorial Chair in Governance of the Department of Political Science, Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye, Ogun State last Wednesday. The professor said at the lecture which was organized to coincide with the monarch’s 83rd birthday that the advocacy role of the media is even suggested in the titles of Nigerian newspapers, such as Vanguard, Guardian, Punch and Tribune.

    The pioneer occupant of the Professorial Chair said that role has a formal constitutional recognition in Section 22 of the constitution. Another heroic moment, he added, was the media’s magnificent opposition to military dictatorship in the 1990s, which featured publications that went underground to survive and a pirate radio station. He said the advocacy role of the media also led to the resignation of Hon. Salisu Buhari as the Speaker of the House of Representatives in the early days of the current political dispensation in 1999 over allegations of age falsification; the easing out of office of Ms Stella Oduah in 2014 for corruption-related charges; as well as the current ordeal of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), David Babachir Lawal over allegations of grass-cutting contract scandal. The above feats, he said, were achieved through advocacy journalism, in the form of reports and editorials.

    Olukotun said the advocacy and the reform-oriented role of the media came at a huge cost to practitioners and their organisations. Recalling that the State House correspondent of The Punch, Mr. Olalekan Adetayo, was recently expelled from the beat over a story on President Muhammadu Buhari’s health, he said journalists continue to suffer intimidation from state officials, even after the signing into law of the Freedom of Information Act on May 28, 2011.

    He added: “There are the peremptory arrests, prosecution and persecution of critical journalists, as well as seizure of copies of independent newspapers, such as occurred in June 2014 when the Nigerian army carried out searches leading to confiscation of copies of Leadership, The Nation, Daily Trust and The Punch. Although justified on security grounds, a typical opinion is that of Reporters Without Borders, which argued that the action obstructs the Nigeria’s public right of information. Such breaches of press freedom were replicated throughout the period under study.”

    However, Olukotun said a number of constraints or drawbacks inhibit the crusading role of journalists. For example, he said Nigerian journalists work under far from ideal conditions of employment. He said: “As Africa Media Barometer (2011:52) expressed it: Across the industry, working conditions for Nigerian journalists and other media professionals are poor. Salaries are low, irregular and in some cases, inexistent. This is not only true of private media organizations. Even journalists of state-owned media are underpaid and complain of lack of career prospects. Many workers in the state-media are also recruited as casual staff and work under even more pathetic conditions.”

    As a corollary to the above, he said corruption or the ‘brown envelope syndrome’ is rampant in the industry. His words: “Hence, the economic frying pan under which the media operated may have accentuated the ‘brown envelope’ syndrome whereby journalists are bribed to publish, mainstream, relegate or kill stories…”

    Somewhat related to the above, he said, is the use of beat associations to extort money from industry stakeholders. His words: “Other forms of questionable transactions prevalent in the media include the existence of beat associations, which are constituted by reporters covering specialized news desks. Arogundade (2015, p15), a senior journalist, provides insight into this practice: In 2012, the National Association of Energy Correspondents (NAEC) named Chevron Nigeria Limited as the best Community Development Company of the year. Same year, the League of Airport and Aviation Correspondents (LAAC) conferred an award of excellence on the then Aviation Minister, Princess Stella Adaeze Oduah (later sacked from the cabinet over irregular purchase of bullet-proof cars) and decorated Dana Air, later involved in a crash, the most customer-friendly Airline in Nigeria.”

    Olukotun said the appointment of prominent journalists as Senior Special Advisers on Media and Communication by successive governments in both federal and state levels is one of the reasons why the media have lost their bite, by failing carry out investigative reporting.

    Besides, he said government is in the habit of influencing the editorial content of independent newspapers through advertising. He said: “The point being made here is that advertisers exercise indirect veto on editorial content by sanctioning independent private media, which set out to be fearless and daring. Considering that the state is the biggest advertiser, it has often used this power to skew the media playing field in favour of state-owned electronic media, as well as compliant and complacent private media.”

    The Oba Adetona Professorial Chair also added the escalating cost of newspaper production inputs as another reason for the high mortality rate in the industry. With the aid of a table, indicating the rising cost of several input such as newsprint, plates and black ink over the years, he said the development put pressure on publishers many of whose enterprises were undercapitalized in the first place. He added: “Another dimension of the problem is the fact that the lack of adequate infrastructure, power and security, brought additional pressure on businesses, including newspapers and electronic media.”

    Another table listed the titles that collapsed between 1999 and 2017. These are: Sketch (2000), Concord (2000), The Post Express (2003), Tempo (2003), National Interest (2006), The Comet (2007), New Age (2008), Spectator Weekly (2008), Westerner (2011), Newswatch (2011), Next (2011), New Nigeria (2012), Nigerian Compass (2012), PM News (2015) and Newswatch Daily (2016).

    He said the Nigerian media mirrors the ideological barrenness of the political class and that this is reflected in the ideological narrowness of media content, with the absence of fundamental debate on social and economic direction. He said: “As Sam Oyovbaire expressed it: The radicalism of the media as an anti-colonial and pro-independence vehicle; as anti-military rule and pro-democracy institution is really no more than being radicalism of the right or centre ideology. For obvious reasons, the same goes for the broadcast media. In the real sense, Nigeria has only establishment or status quo media.”

    Related to this lacuna, he added, is the urban centredness of the media and the failure to incorporate the majority of the populace who live in the rural areas. He said: “Overwhelmingly, we encounter the media – newspapers, television stations and blogs – as urban phenomenon, considering that most of them do not have reporters in the rural areas. One looks forward to the day when community newspapers, rural radios and blogs operating from the hinterland will widen the discursive umbrella beyond its currently narrow celebration of eminent persons, rich people, powerful people, all of whom are located in our cities.”

    The other aspect of Olukotun’s lecture centres on the changing profile of the Nigerian media. To begin with, he said the period between 1999 and 2017 witnessed phenomenal expansion in the industry. This he attributed to the liberalized political space, the exigencies of political competition warranting the replication of media outlets, as well as an economic boom, owing to the unprecedented increase in the price of oil in the world market for many years. The oil boom, he said, produced a new class of billionaires and economic players, several of whom invested in the media. He said: “The period consequently reinforced Nigeria’s position as the country with the largest and the most vibrant media industry in Africa, followed by South Africa and Kenya.

    Another positive development, he added, is the better engagement and participation of Nigerians in democratic discourse, through access to the internet. Quoting the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), he said the number of internet subscribers jumped from 2.3 million in 2002 to 86 million in 2016; with a large majority of them connecting to the internet with their mobile phones. This improved media access, because most newspapers have websites where they upload digital copies of their print edition.

    Olukotun said the situation has further improved with upsurge of online news publications, particularly with the arrival of platforms like Premium Times (October 2011) and The Cable (April 2014), as well as the mushrooming of social media platforms. In spite of their penchant for recycling rumours and peddling fake news, the professor of political communication said social media platforms constitute exciting spaces for civic participation and democratic discourse.

    Besides, he said considering that newspapers increasingly source their reports from online publications and social media platforms, a synergy has been created between both forms of media, “especially on anti-corruption and human rights issues”.

    Olukotun also spoke of the rebirth of northern (Arewa) media, with Abuja-based publications like Leadership, Daily Trust, People’s Daily and Abuja Inquirer becoming part of Nigeria’s discourse map. He said: “In this list, easily the most successful are Leadership, founded in 2004 by Sam Nda Isaiah…; as well as the Trust group of publications, which includes Weekly Trust, Daily Trust, Sunday Trust and Hausa language newspaper Aminiyah. These independent newspapers appear to have broken the jinx of frequent collapse of newspapers in that part of the country.”

    Also, the professor notes that the vacuum created by the eclipse of Champion newspapers has been filled to a large extent by the newspaper chain of former Governor of Abia State, Dr. Orji Uzo Kalu. He said: “The chain includes: The Sun, New Telegraph and The Spectator. Although these are based in Lagos, they draw a substantial part of their sales and advertising revenue from the Southeast and the Southsouth.”

    Dignitaries at the event included the Oba of Lagos, Rilwan Akiolu; former Governor Gbenga Daniel; former Deputy Governor Adegbenga Kaka; Afenifere chieftain, Chief Ayo Adebanjo; the Pro-Chancellor and Chairman, Governing Council, Leads City University, Ibadan, Prof. Jide Owoeye; the General Overseer of the Trinity House Ministries International, Pastor Ituah Ighodalo, the Chairman, Troyka Holdings, Biodun Shobanjo, the acting Vice Chancellor, Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye, Prof. Ganiyu Olatunde; and the host, Oba Sikiru Adetona and his wife, Kemi. The Governor Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State was represented by his Director of Communications and Strategy, Mr. Semiu Okanlawon.

  • Nigerian govt urged to create enabling environment for media practice

    Nigerian govt urged to create enabling environment for media practice

    A coalition of media advocacy organizations in Nigeria under the aegis of the Partnership for Media and Democracy in Nigeria (PAMED) has called on the Federal Government to create an enabling environment for media practice in the country.

    The group  made the call in a statement to mark the World Press Freedom Day 2017 signed by Dr. Akin Akingbulu, Executive Director, Institute for Media and Society (IMS) Lanre Arogundade, Director, International Press Centre (IPC) and Edetaen Ojo, Executive Director, Media Rights Agenda (MRA).

    PAMED noted that the legal and policy environment for the practice of journalism in Nigeria was not conducive, adding that there is an urgent need to address the issue to ensure that journalists do not become endangered species in Nigeria.

    The group which said it was  worried at the abysmal state of media freedom in Nigeria, PAMED noted that Reporters Without Borders (Reporters sans Frontières RSF), the Paris, France based freedom of expression organization  ranked Nigeria 122 out of 180 countries in its 2017 World Press Freedom Index released on April 16, 2017.

    It described the situation as appalling, noting that the government’s non-challant attitude to investigating attacks on journalists and bringing perpetrators to justice has fueled impunity by perpetrators since they are invariably never brought to justice.

    PAMED said from the murder of Dele Giwa on October 19, 1986 till date, no perpetrator in all the cases of journalists murdered in Nigeria has been apprehended, tried or brought to book as virtually all of them have gone free.

    Observing that the shooting to death at his residence of Mr. Famous Giobaro, a Desk Editor with the Bayelsa State owned Glory FM 97.1in the early hours of April 16, 2017 by unidentified gunmen, was the latest in a series of such incidents, it said that it was tragic that the perpetrators of this heinous act may also never be found or brought to justice.

    PAMED called on the government to make a public commitment to fully implement the UN Plan of Action on the Safety of Journalists and the Issue of Impunity to stem the ugly tide.

    It also called on the government to take decisive measures to combat impunity for crimes against journalists, including by strengthening UN mechanisms; cooperating with member States; partnering with other organizations and institutions; raising awareness; sensitizing and training security and law enforcement agencies to investigate cases; and fostering safety initiatives.

     

     

  • Ambode tasks media on partnership to end recession

    Ambode tasks media on partnership to end recession

    Lagos State Governor, Mr Akinwunmi Ambode, on Saturday called on the media to partner with government and  put the nation above every other interest.

    Ambode made the call while declaring open the 2017 Biennial Convention of the Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) in Lagos.

    He commended the NGE for its contributions to the growth of journalism in the nation and its choice of Lagos, the hub of journalism for the event, especially as the state turns 50.

    “My request and message to you today is to embrace partnership as an option for the growth and development of the country.

    “We may serve in different arms of the society, but we all share a common goal which is to make our country better.

    “One of the major responsibilities of the Media is to advance the cause of good governance.

    “ Whilst free media is at the heart of true democracy, our focus should be how the Media can more effectively support this agenda.

    Ambode tasked the media to lend the needed support in bringing government`s noble efforts to public consciousness.

    “With your vital partnership, we are hopeful that other governments can borrow a leaf from the Lagos Model and replicate same in their respective domains, to promote good governance to the greater benefit of humanity,” he said.

    The governor said that government was conscious of the fact that it had a duty to guarantee every Lagosian maximum benefits of democracy dividends.

    “This requires innovativeness, selflessness, diligence and prudent management of available human and material resources which we have  deployed, in order to improve the well-being of our people,” he said.

    He also said that  government would continue to initiate and execute programmes aimed at making the state the investment haven and tourism destination of Africa.

    He commended the NGE for its efforts in stimulating awareness and addressing issues relevant to the growth and development of journalism and the nation.
    He said explained that a Ministry of Wealth Creation was set up to create policies aimed at addressing unemployment through the state entrepreneurship Trust Fund.

    The governor said  that the state government had released more than N4 billion to 2000 people to create jobs.

    “We are irrevocably committed to promoting the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME) sub-sector in the State,” Ambode said.

  • Nigerian media and the Presidency

    Preamble

    The media is like a spider web. A small object that approaches it easily gets ensnared. But if the object is big, no time is wasted in attempting to tear the web apart. That is the parable of the media in the hands of power wielders.

    It is no longer news that the State House correspondent of the Punch newspaper , Olalekan Adetayo, was expelled from the Presidential Villa in Abuja last Monday. And the expulsion was allegedly carried out on the order of the Chief Security Officer (CSO) to Mr. President without any consultation with the Presidential media team in the same Villa. Thank God, a fine professional like Femi Adesina was up to the task as he immediately rescued the situation and thereby saved Mr. President of another embarrassing media dent that could have dangerously robbed on his image with a lasting effect. The incident is a further confirmation that the Presidency lacks synergy in its internal operations and the public is not oblivious of this.

    Going through the history of Punch newspaper, one will discover that the paper was founded on a platform of radicalism in 1976 by two gentlemen of professional competence. These were the late Chief James Olu Aboderin, a Chartered Account and Samson Oruru Amuka Pemu, an Editor from the then Daily Times stable. The latter is now the Chairman and Publisher of Vanguard newspaper. The radical background of Punch newspaper was the reason for adopting the slogan: ‘Pack a Punch’ which was popularly known with the Punch in 1970s and early 1980s.  It was for the same reason that the Beattle Car was used as its hypothetical symbol of ruggedness. “You can’t kill the Beattle”.

     

    Media waves

    When the Nigerian media waves throbbed with the breaking news of Punch correspondent’s expulsion incident, it quickly became a reminder of several similar incidents in that same Villa since the inception of the ongoing 4th republic. It will be recalled that the first Presidential media spokesman in that Villa in 1999 was Dr Doyin Okupe (a medical doctor) who was generally perceived as a square peg in a round hole as far as that office was concerned. He had to be unceremoniously removed by President Olusegun Obasanjo after two years of intolerable performance in office.

    But the generality of Nigerian journalists as well as the enlightened members of the public had known that Okupe’s sack was just a matter of time. The office required professionally trained personnel in the field of information and communication management. Thus, putting a medical doctor in that office was like putting a bull in a china shop.

     

    Tunji Oseni’s Era

    When the first experiment failed, the same President Obasanjo went out in search of a versatile journalist of international repute, as a replacement for Okupe. That impeccable qualification was found in the late Tunji Oseni. And the gentleman’s appointment brought a great relief to most Nigerian media houses in the belief that with Oseni in the saddle, the practice of journalism in relation to governance at the federal level would strengthen democracy in the country.

     

    Obasanjo’s perception

    Unfortunately, however, President Obasanjo did not see the job in that light. His seeming perception of the post of Special Adviser to the President on media was to use the office to silence the opposition and curb the perceived recklessness of the media. But Tunji Oseni was too refined to engage in such a butcher’s job. Thus, in less than two years again, President Obasanjo became fed up with Oseni’s civility and professional handling of the Presidential publicity management. What he (President Obasanjo) seemingly wanted for that office was brutality and not civility. He therefore fired the gentleman called Tunji Oseni through a humiliating radio announcement and then searched for another crack journalist of international repute who would however do the bidding of the President, irrespective of professionalism.

     

    The late Remi Oyo

    It was that presidential search that brought the late Remi Oyo to the Presidential Villa as Nigeria’s first female journalist to occupy the seat that was hitherto seen as a special preserve of the male gender. Although Mrs. Oyo was well equipped for the job, it was another matter if she would do it according to Presidential expectation at the expense of her professional prowess.

     

    Professional parasites

    It was that uncertainty on the part of the President that led to the employment of two ‘rental criers’ to handle the unprofessional angle of Oyo’s job. One of them was Femi Fani-Kayode. The other was Akin Osuntokun.

    Sensing that Remi Oyo might not be courageous enough to operate differently from the way Tunji Oseni did, the President decided to rely on the duo of the bulldozers who were given different innocuous titles to justify their pay.  Thus, through their bulldozing approach to publicity at the Presidential Villa, those men relieved Mr. President of his professional allergy and thus prevented him albeit inadvertently, from ending up in hiring four Special Advisers/ Assistants on publicity in eight years of his tenure. But it is on record that he used three Advisers with the period.

     

    Tunji Oseni’s narration

    Narrating his ordeal after leaving office, Tunji Oseni said Mr. President suddenly walked into his (Oseni’s) office strangely one day and said to him: “Tunji, I am thinking of making you an Ambassador in one of the foreign countries.” And, when he (Oseni) mildly objected to that proposal saying that he was satisfied with the job at hand, the President just walked away without uttering a word. About ten minutes later, he (Oseni) heard of his sack on the radio. And within a couple of hours, some security men told him to quit his official residence within 48 hours. That is the extent to which professionalism is accorded respect in Nigeria. Tunji Oseji never got over that shock till his death.

    If a renowned professional of Tunji Oseni’s status could be so humiliated what else is there to say about the expulsion of a correspondent from the Presidential Villa by a boss of another sector?

     

    Expulsion of ‘The Monitor’ correspondent

    While Remi Oyo held sway in that office, the State House correspondent of an Ibadan-based newspaper, ‘The Monitor’, was not just expelled from Aso Rock, he was physically bundled out of the Villa on the order of Mr. President who was supposed to be the father of all. The young man’s offence was to have asked a question that was considered as obnoxious to the Presidential power of that time.

    From all these, it became evident that calling the media the Fourth Estate of Realm is a mere political nomenclature that is totally abhorrent to Nigerian political class. Perhaps that was why President Olusegun Obasanjo vetoed the Freedom of Information Bill for about five years from 2002 to 2007 and refused to sign it into law till his exit from that office.

     

    Whistle Blowers’ risk

    It was the former British Prime Minister, David Cameron, who first blew the whistle by drawing the attention of the world to the extent of corruption in Nigeria. He said emphatically that “Nigeria is a fantastically corrupt country”. That could be called his parting gift for our country on his way out of office as Prime Minister. But he had hardly completed that sentence when the noisy Nigerian press descended on him and took him to the laundry. As usual, our press rained abuses on him and asked him to proceed to the gallows. But now, less than six months after he made the statement, who is right? And who is wrong? Today, the man is globally acknowledged as a speaker of the truth at least in that respect.  And ever since, the Nigerian press has kept silent on the matter burying its ugly head in shame.

     

    Not patriotism

    Patriotism is not about blindly defending one’s country even where the truth is obvious. Going deep into the causes and effect of corruption in Nigeria, our press can hardly exonerate itself. Here is a press that blatantly paint the truth black and shamelessly clad falsehood in a cloak just for selfish reason.

    Yours sincerely is not just a veteran journalist but also a member of Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE). But whatever the situation may be, calling a spade a spade is the hallmark of patriotism. Those who claim to love this country must show it not in words by in action.

    Whistle blowing is yielding positive results. The looters of this country and their satanic accomplices must be ready to go to the gallows if need be. A trillion barking dogs cannot stop the surging train on its rail. Nigeria must survive.

  • From theatre to the media:   Odyssey of Yemi Ogunbiyi at 70

    From theatre to the media: Odyssey of Yemi Ogunbiyi at 70

    A former Personal Assistant to  ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo on Domestic Affairs, Mr Tunde Olusunle, in this piece, examines the contributions of a former Managing Director of Daily Times, Dr Yemi Ogunbiyi, who clocks 70 today, to the media  industry 

    This essay attempts an examination of the variegated professional career of Yemi Ogunbiyi, one of the most prominent shapers of the contemporary media practice in Nigeria and his contributions to Nigerian theatre scholarship; literary criticism and new journalism in Nigeria. It traces his vocational origins as a theatre scholar and practitioner, through his venture into journalism, as an innovator and seasoned administrator in two of Nigeria’s largest newspaper conglomerates in their time, Guardian Newspapers Limited and the Daily Times of Nigeria Plc, and his more recent endeavours in public relations, advertising and publishing.
    It is not unexpected that contemporary engagers of the Yemi Ogunbiyi phenomenon will most readily define him within the context of his most recent endeavours in advertising, public relations and publishing.
    This will be most fitting for a man who has devoted the better part of the last three decades in the challenging terrains of these variegated, albeit mutually compatible vocations.
    For the avoidance of doubt, about 25 years ago, Ogunbiyi launched into advertising and public relations, when he established Tanus Communications Ltd, to compete in a market hitherto dominated by much older brands in the industry. With pre-existing labels such as Lintas Ltd; Insight Communications Ltd; SO and U Ltd, and similar outfits, already setting the pace in the sector, Ogunbiyi’s creation was without doubt, a neophyte.
    Ogunbiyi’s Tanus Communications, which began operations May 1992, started less than five months after his exit from the Daily Times of Nigeria Plc, where he had functioned as Chief Executive for almost three years. Followers of his media odyssey, which began at the turn of the 1980s with the establishment of The Guardian, had, presumably looked forward to the extension and continuation of his career in journalism, the profession which had brought him so much fame and goodwill in the preceding years. His foray into these extensions of the mass media, without doubt, elicited confoundment from many.
    Not too many remember, however, that Ogunbiyi actually began his illustrious professional career, which has spanned the better part of the past five decades, in the theatre. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Literature in English from the University of Ibadan in 1971; attended the New York University, Brooklyn for graduate studies and received a Master of Arts and Doctorate Degrees, respectively, between 1972 and 1976. His Doctorate thesis, supervised by the American scholar, Richard Schechecner, was based on film criticism. He subsequently returned to Nigeria to take up a lectureship appointment at the University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University).
    As he turns 70, April 13, 2017, however, it becomes germane to interrogate the career and enterprise of this scholar, former university teacher, journalist, administrator, public relations doyen and publisher, to properly situate his contributions to these professions and to national development. This is critical so that salient aspects of this endeavours are not casually subsumed under the canopy of his most recent ventures in the Nigerian business and commercial sector.
    Yemi Ogunbiyi’s vocational origins are resident in the finest traditions of the academia, his ideological affiliation and scholastic temperament distinctly of the left-wing Marxian hue, without genuflections. He thus found good company in the Department of Literature of “Unife”, (the abbreviation by which the University of Ife was popularly known), with colleagues like the venerated Nobel Laureate, Wole Soyinka, and the younger Biodun Jeyifo, the fiery critic and theorist; Kole Omotosho, the prolific novelist and literary documentanist and the highly respected oral literature scholar, Godini Gabriel Darah.
    Ogunbiyi joined Soyinka, Omotosho, Femi Osofisan, Dapo Adelugba, Rasheed Onikoyi, Joel Adedeji and Femi Johnson, on the cast of the film adaptation of Kongi’s Harvest, written by Soyinka and co-directed by Soyinka and the African American film director, Ossie Davies, during those years preceding the eventual blossoming of a film and television sub-culture in the University of Ife.
    It was not any surprise therefore, that following the re-configuration of the Department of Literature and the subsequent establishment of the Department of Dramatic Arts in 1977, Ogunbiyi was one of the very first members of the academic staff to be redeployed to the new creation, to join Soyinka.
    Ahmed Yerima in his keynote address at the Third Edition of the Ife International Film Festival, November 29 to December 2, 2012, notes the foundational role played by Ogunbiyi in the development of a film and television curriculum for the University of Ife:
    Film and Television did not come into the Department of Dramatic Arts curriculum until 1978, when the degree programme was started…..
    The Ife curriculum was greatly inspired by Yemi Ogunbiyi (who) was seconded from the Department of Literature to assist Soyinka in setting up the Department of Dramatic Arts…. Ogunbiyi’s background in film gave birth to the course which was titled “Film and Television”.
    Against the backdrop of his endeavours in film and indeed his facial resemblance to the revered African American film actor, Richard Roundtree, who was a household name in the 1970s and whose stage alias was “Shaft”, Ogunbiyi was equally nicknamed Shaft by his numerous contemporaries and friends. He later proved to be the critical shaft of many organisations and initiatives in which he was involved, over time.
    In 1981, Ogunbiyi released the seminal work: Drama and Theatre In Nigeria: A Critical Source Book. The volume which was edited by him, is an assemblage of rigorously researched academic essays by some of the most formidable names in dramatic criticism. These include Soyinka, Jeyifo, Ossie Onuora Enekwe, MJC Echeruo, Ola Rotimi, Dapo Adelugba, Ulli Beier and Ebun Clark. The work remains an invaluable resource material for teachers, students, researchers and enthusiasts alike, in the generational evolution and multicultural dimensions of drama and theatre in Nigeria, as envisioned by Ogunbiyi in the preface to the book. There he defines his motivation for the volume as one informed by the need to:
    …Readily make available those essays which are not quite accessible to students of African theatre history in our universities and colleges. It would also promote a serious starting point for the much needed re-evaluation of Nigerian drama and theatre. (xiii)
    Side by side with his teaching pre-occupation, Ogunbiyi also teamed up with Jeyifo to co-found Positive Review, a journal of society and culture in Black Africa. The journal encapsulated the thoughts and ideals of a generation of left-inclined creative writers and scholars, including Omolara Ogundipe-Leslie, Odia Ofeimun and other more familiar names at the time.
    Ogunbiyi rose to the position of Senior Lecturer and Acting Head of the Department of Dramatic Arts, before he joined the Editorial Board of The Guardian newspapers on an initial one-year sabbatical, at the inception of the newspaper, in 1983.
    Recounting his first meeting with the founder and pioneer publisher of The Guardian, Alex Uruemu Ibru, in a December 12, 2011 tribute, Ogunbiyi says:
    I recall clearly my first meeting with Mr. Alex Ibru. It was in June of 1983. After months of prodding from Dr. Stanley Macebuh to join the nascent team at The Guardian, I accepted his offer to visit the premises of the organisation at Rutam House.
    And as was the tradition in those days, Dr. Macebuh took me to see Mr. Ibru first. Coming from Ife, with my heavy dose of latent left wing biases, I was not sure that I wanted to meet Mr. Ibru just yet. The meeting turned out to be brief…..
    Ogunbiyi subsequently agreed to join the Editorial Board of The Guardian, the intellectual engine room of the organisation.
    In The Whole Truth (2004) a compendium of selected editorials of The Guardian from 1983 to 2003, edited by Reuben Abati, Ogunbiyi is listed in the top ten bracket of 72 full time members of the board; visiting members and consultants alike, among some of the most highly regarded names in the media industry. His colleagues included contemporaries from the academia like Macebuh, Onwuchekwa Jemie, Chinweizu, Osofisan, Herbert Ekwe Ekwe and core media professionals like Sully Abu, Sonala Olumhense and Lade Bonuola.
    Whereas his primary editorial brief consisted of generating editorial topics, canvassing them at regular sittings of the board, drafting editorials and sustaining regular op-ed contributions to the newspapers, the creatively restless and expansively-minded Ogunbiyi spawned several editorial novelties.
    Consistent with his primary commitment to the development of criticism and the growth of creative writing, Ogunbiyi, in response to the challenge and encouragement of Macebuh, initiated the Guardian Literary Series, GLS, in conjunction with Osofisan. The objective was to create a public platform for the appreciation of Nigeria’s very rich literary tradition.
    In his foreward to Perspectives on Nigerian Literature: 1700 to the Present, Volume One (1988), a collection of some of the essays published in the Guardian Literary Series, Macebuh notes that:
    The Guardian Literary Series began as an experiment. Creative writing in Nigeria had a long history. But only a few older writers were sufficiently well-known and this was mainly because most of their major works had been published before the economic slump of the late 1980s….
    The idea at The Guardian, initiated primarily by Yemi Ogunbiyi and Femi Osofisan, was to step in where book publishing companies could not and offer on a weekly basis in our newspaper, a series of critical appraisals of Nigerian writers (viii)
    Ogunbiyi corroborates Macebuh in his preface to the second volume of the publication, Perspectives on Nigerian Literature: 1700 to the Present, Volume Two (1988), when he says:
    It was quite clear from the inception of The Guardian as a serious daily newspaper in July 1983, that sooner or later, the newspaper would have to participate in the effort to help “popularise” our vibrant literature.
    It was clear to the founding fathers that the literary pages of a serious national newspaper, had an abiding duty to participate, initiate and even stir up debate in the all-important area of literature and culture. In a broad sense that was the objective for starting the Guardian Literary Series. (xi)
    Giants in literary criticism who contributed to the project included Wole Soyinka, Abiola Irele, Dan Izevbaye, Isidore Okpewho, Biodun Jeyifo, Akinwunmi Isola, Ernest Emenyonu, Sam Asein, Chidi Amuta, Femi Osofisan, Olu Obafemi, Catherine Acholonu, Ibrahim Yaro Yahaya and Adebayo Williams.
    Ogunbiyi equally initiated a series of exclusive interviews with world leaders, which added diversity to the regular buffet of the editorial content of The Guardian. He interviewed Presidents, Heads of State and Prime Ministers like: Shimon Peres of Israel; Muammar Gaddaffi of Libya; Thomas Sankara of Burkina Faso; Julius Nyerere of Tanzania; Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia and Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe.
    Reminiscing on his interview with Gaddaffi which he undertook with the founder of The Guardian, Ogunbiyi recalls:
    By far the most bizarre of our trips was our encounter with Col Gaddaffi. We had arrived on a Saturday for a scheduled Sunday appointment with the “Leader” as he was fondly called in all of Libya. At breakfast the next morning, officials from the President’s office came for us, politely chauffeured us to the airport and flew us out without prior knowledge of our destination, to Benghazi, for what we were assured was to be a prompt interview with Col. Gaddaffi… With the private jet that flew us neatly parked at a nearby aerodrome, we ended up spending three days in Benghazi, in near seclusion, without our bags or change of clothing….
    The publisher never accompanied
    me to another interview!
    Upon completion of his one year sabbatical, Ibru brought a lot of pressure to bear in Ogunbiyi and subsequently appointed him Controller, Office of the Publisher in 1985. In a manner of speaking, he became something of the Chief of Staff to the Publisher. Not long after, he was elevated to the Board of Directors as Executive Director, Public Affairs and Marketing from January 1986 to February 1989. In this capacity, he superintended over the Circulation, Transport and Advertisement Departments, the commercial and operational tripod of the newspaper.
    On March 1, 1989 Ogunbiyi was appointed Managing Director of the Daily Times of Nigeria Plc, to replace Olusegun Osoba, who had just completed a five year stint on the job.
    If Ogunbiyi’s six year sojourn in The Guardian enabled him to learn the ropes of newspaper administration and management, his appointment as Chief Executive of the Daily Times was an opportunity to put into practice the aggregate experience garnered and the lessons learnt. It has indeed been argued that there is perhaps no chief executive of the Daily Times, after the iconic Alhaji Babatunde Jose, who impacted as much on the organisation, as Yemi Ogunbiyi.
    The Daily Times of Nigeria Plc was a humongous conglomerate with almost a dozen diverse subsidiaries, notably: Times Publications Division, TPD, (Publisher of the Daily Times and a host of other publications); Nigerpack Ltd; Times Press Ltd; Times Books Ltd; Times Leisure Services Ltd, (organisers of the annual Miss Nigeria Beauty Pageant); Naira Investments; Naira Properties Ltd; Pilgrims Books Ltd and Times Journalism Institute, TJI. The organisation equally owned 80% stakes in the London based West Africa Magazine, which had a complement of Nigerian and foreign personnel alike.
    Chambers Twentieth Century Dictionary defines a Shaft among others, as a “rotating rod that transmits motion”. If Ogunbiyi’s longstanding nickname was thought to be just another alias, his exertions at the Daily Times lent credence to the appropriateness of the name, as he proved to be the engine room that drove development in the organisation.
    Niyi Osundare’s impressions of the Times before the Ogunbiyi era in the Daily Times as espoused in Dialogue With My Country, (2011), was extremely scathing. In his essay titled: The Ogunbiyi Phenomenon, Osundare says:
    I stopped reading the Times in June 1980 (yes, I am very sure of the date!) I stopped because what before then was the undisputed flagship of Nigerian print journalism had sunk to such an abysmal level of sycophancy and depravity that is soiled even the hands of groundnut sellers whose unpleasant job it was to use its unsold bundles to wrap their ware. Truth rapidly took on a pale, partisan hue. The Times became a pamphlet in which the time-serving gladiators and opportunists of the Second Republic daily stroked their afflicted egos. Rational thought and a genuinely national discourse took leave of its pages. Obituary advertisements took over, bringing in tons of cheap naira, but systematically killing our national dialogue. What used to be a national dialogue became a national insult. (103)
    Ogunbiyi took up the gauntlet and resolved to reverse the trend. Recognising the fact that his vision for a radical turnaround of the fortunes of the organisation could only be steered by a very solid human resource base, Ogunbiyi began the immediate re-organisation of the manpower content of the organisation.
    The Daily Times of Nigeria Plc was not without select top-rated professionals and intellectuals in its editorial arm, though. There were household names like Onyema Ugochukwu, the economist-banker turned journalist who was one of the pioneers of contemporary business journalism, and Farouk Umar Mohammed, who had served variously as Editor and General Manager of the Daily Times.

  • Media and development

    Development refers to an improvement in the economic situation of the people where the basic necessities of life such as food, housing, education, good income and health care are met at affordable cost and where the society is safe, peaceful, secure, attractive and worth living.

    The media have big roles to play in helping our people come up in the Human Development Index as popularised by the UNDP and its Sustainable Human Development (SHI). The media can pursue reportages that promote people-centred development through people’s empowerment; encourage popular participation that put the people first, a bottom- up development model from the grassroots that also promotes shared environmental responsibilities.

    In most parts of Africa and indeed Nigeria, mass media activities have remained urban enterprises to the neglect of people living in the rural areas where 70% of the population lives. When the story of the agricultural breakthrough deal brokered by the Anambra State government broke in 2016, rather than explore further by climbing boats and using other means to get to the locations where the Ugu and Onugbu farms are located, many of our colleagues chose rather to report ‘convenient falsehood’ which were regurgitated and fallacious stories bordering on scandalous falsehood copied from bogus and fake internet websites and off the face book pages of sworn enemies of the Anambra State government.

    The attitude of many point to a growing culture of cynicism bordering on hate, if not dislike, of the activities of the present administration in the state. Such narrow- mindedness tends to preclude purveyors of such vile and hate-filled narratives from seeing anything good in what the government is doing. Since when did journalism become anti-progress and anti-development to the point that a journalist who probably is sitting in this auditorium did not find any single thing good to write about the Willie Obiano administration after going round the state for 2 days.

    John and Olusola (2015) opine that Development-oriented messages are largely elusive in the rural areas of Africa. According to him, Media, as custodians of development, have done little or nothing in the dissemination of development messages in the rural areas. The fate of the rural African people in the face of urban- centric media practice and elusive development-oriented messages still hang in the balance with regard to information, mobilisation and education.

    What could be the reason for this? Don’t we find reporting rural communities of Anambra State attractive? Is it dangerous to report from the rural communities? Are there no stories to be told from the rural communities of Anambra State? Is it difficult to access rural communities? Why is journalism practice in Anambra State majorly an urban phenomenon? I am aware that the Anambra State Ministry of Information and Communication Strategy has Information Officers at all the LGAs and communities in Anambra State but the question is, to what extent do their reportage make it to mainstream media? Also to what extent are the information officers effective in taking back developmental news and information from the city centres to the rural communities?

    One may conclude that modern means of mass communication have not lived up to expectation in terms of adequate coverage of newsworthy events in the rural areas where Wilson (1999) notes “seventy percent of the people live without access to modern media of communication.”

    It is my view that if media practitioners in the state are guided by the theory and principles of development communication, it would serve us better. Development media theory which is recommended for countries at lower levels of economic development and with limited resources takes various forms but essentially proposes that media freedom, while desirable, should be subordinated (of necessity) to the requirements of economic, social and political development.

    To empower rural dwellers, there has been a push in the advocacy for the establishment of community radio. Individuals, as a matter of right, should have access to media and the right to be served according to their own needs. Therefore, the siting of rural community radio stations and even viewing centres in most rural areas for education, enlightenment, and information becomes imperative. The same goes for the establishment and shared ownership of local community newspapers in native languages and the continued use of other traditional media forms.

    Media organisations operating in Anambra State should increase the Igbo language content of their offerings. This is to help promote the dying language, promote Igbo language, culture and identity and also carry the rural dwellers along by giving priority to news and information links with rural areas for balanced and unbiased news reportage and analyses.

    We expect that journalists operating in Anambra State take further interest in helping to sensitise Ndi Anambra on ecological and other issues facing us. As men of conscience, we need to review how we reported the aftermath of the rainfall in some parts of the state last week, the rains washed up debris on the roads from blocked drainages but some of us chose to blame the government for this. In encouraging the efforts of the state Ministry of Environment and the state waste management agency (ASWAMA), the media can help in campaigning and informing our people on good waste disposal manners.

    We appear to be much fixated on reportage of government activities to the neglect of other issues. Why is this so? Is it much more ‘lucrative’ to praise or criticise government? There are too many stories we are not yet telling which are begging to be told, for example, the plight of widows in our society and other such stories.

    Other areas that media practitioners can help in the socio-economic development of Anambra State are: (1) Promoting government’s developmental strides (2) Sensitisation of the people in health and related matters (3) Voter sensitisation, registration and voting to discourage apathy in the coming gubernatorial elections (4) Promoting Anambra State’s shared values, anthem etc. (5) Promoting the investment opportunities that abound in Anambra State, the works of Anambra State Investment Promotion and Protection Agency (ANSIPPA) and Anambra Small Business Agency (ASBA) (6) Promoting the language and culture of Ndi Anambra (7) Promoting peace and inter-community relationships (8) Highlighting the ills in the society with a view to suggesting accepted norms and sharing best practices etc.

    As media practitioners, when we partner with the government and Ndi Anambra in these areas, we are helping to promote socio-economic development in Anambra State.

     

    • Excerpt of a paper presented by Uche Nworah, MD/CEO, Anambra Broadcasting Service (ABS), at the Anambra Media Summit organised by the Anambra State Chapter of the Nigerian Union of Journalists, March 28 – 29, 2017