By
Mr. Sabella Ogbobode
Abidde
In most societies around the world, the
Media, sometimes referred to as the Fourth Estate, is as important as the
executive, legislative and judicial arms of government. Considered
incorruptible by most, the media is society’s watch-dog. Generally
speaking, the role of the Media is to educate, inform and entertain the
masses; it does so by remaining objective and impartial in a status quo
mode. In great and progressive societies however, the Media may expand its
role by
becoming an activist: advocating and campaigning for reforms for the overall good of the people. It goes about its activism by challenging conventional wisdom, engaging in investigative journalism, arousing the conscience of the state, doing the people’s biddings and helping to shape intermestic debates. A nation without an independent media is a nation without conscience, without hope.
becoming an activist: advocating and campaigning for reforms for the overall good of the people. It goes about its activism by challenging conventional wisdom, engaging in investigative journalism, arousing the conscience of the state, doing the people’s biddings and helping to shape intermestic debates. A nation without an independent media is a nation without conscience, without hope.
In years gone by, the Nigerian Media was an
activist-media making it the most vibrant and purposeful in the whole of
the Black world, if not in the developing world. It had a good reputation,
and also had a visible role in shaping national debates. It greatly
influenced the thinking, actions and pronouncements of policy-makers and
decision-makers; played a vital role in the struggle for Nigeria’s
independence and in the liberation struggle of other African countries.
For instance, the Nigerian Media was in the forefront of the liberation
struggles of countries like Namibia, Angola, Mozambique, Zimbabwe and
South Africa. And in fact, the International Press gauged the pulse of the
Black world by taking a reading of what was being said and written about
in the Nigeria Media. That was then.
Today, the Nigerian Media is a shell of its
once plump self: it has lost its way. And more so since 1999, the Nigerian
Media has become lazy and moribund. And corruptible! Most of the
newspapers and magazines in circulation today do not hide their allegiance
to the party and or government in power (at any given time). And in fact,
it is increasingly becoming difficult to distinguish one paper from
another as most of these papers are home to some third-rate columnists and
reporters. On any given day, sloppy writing and poor editing can be found
all over the pages of the newspapers and magazines -- making one to wonder
if anyone can just walk off the streets to become a journalist in today’s
Nigeria. One can forgive nonprofessional writers, but trained journalists?
Yellow-journalism, sensational news,
coronation news, congratulatory messages, and the likes have become the
order of the day. And in most cases, the Media ignores real stories coming
out of villages and rural areas in favor of big city news. Even so, there
is not much of an analysis involved. In virtually all the papers and
magazines, there are no foreign news items, except those culled form
foreign news sources.
When was the last great investigative
journalism done? With the obscene amount of legal and illegal money
floating in and through the political landscape, did the Media even
attempt to investigate their sources? When was the last time the Nigerian
Media affected the thinking of policy-makers and decision-makers in high
and low places? What role did the Media play in the Nigerian Democracy
experiment? For instance, did the Media educate the people about democracy
and human rights? Why have the Media not told the people how the just
concluded elections were rigged? Or, is it that the Media have no great
insights and no scoops? Journalists, it seems to me, no longer take their
trade and craft seriously.
Additionally, the Media missed great stories
and great investigative report concerning the shenanigans of President
Obasanjo, the National Assembly and the various State Houses vis-à-vis
corruption allegations and the impeachment sagas. In all, one gets the
feeling that the Media allowed itself to be dictated to. In this regard,
it won’t be a surprise if Aso Rock was able to intimidate and blackmail
publishers and editors and reporters. It won’t be a surprise if it came to
light that some publishers, editors and reporters were winning and dinning
with Governors and other government officials. I won’t be surprised to
know that journalists and influential writers were on the payroll of the
people they were supposed to keep an eye on. In other word, corruption may
have overtaken the newsroom and news desks of the great majority of
Nigerian publishers, editors and reporters.
A look at the post-1999 Nigeria Media seem
to indicate that the Media suffered much the same fate as the Nigerian
Intelligentsia: they were frustrated, bought, bribed, and then subjugated
so much so the Media has, for the most part, become government puppet and
errand boy. But unlike the Intelligentsia, it didn’t take much to crush
the Nigerian Media.
Questions: how many newspaper and magazine
publishers, editors and reporters were bought over or knocked around to
cooperate with government and her agents? How many members of the
Editorial Board were/are on government payroll? How many of them are
receiving periodic financial allowance from police commissioners and the
Inspector General of Police and from governors, assembly members, the
presidency, and other private and public individuals?
Except for a few shining stars, most
journalists and writers are monumental disgraces to the journalism
profession. Excerpt for a few publishers and editors and editorial board
members, most are a letdown to their craft and pedigree, and to
themselves. While they were napping, the government and other private and
public individuals exploited and debased the nation without as much as a
protest from the Media. The thoroughbreds of the 1960s through the
mid-1980s would have been alert to the stealing of the nation’s purse;
they would have informed the nation of how Nigerians and non-Nigerians are
busy stealing the nation’s lootable and nonlootable resources; and they
would have investigated “who, why and how” the elections were stolen.
There are too many abnormalities and
political machinations going on in the country today. But sadly, most
people are in the dark, they have no understanding of how they and their
children are being robbed of their dreams and prosperity. Instead of
informing and educating the people, the Nigerian Media is busy engaged in
frivolities, praise-singing, and bootlicking. What nonsense! Our nation is
burning, but the media is silent, sleeping, snoring, and snorting. What a
freak show, this 1999-2007 Nigerian Media.
Sabidde@yahoo.comsabidde@yahoo.com
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