The
United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has urged the media to always report
issues concerning children in accordance with ethical guidelines and principles
so as to safeguard and secure their future.
Blessing addressing the participants |
UNICEF
Communication Officer, Blessing Ejiofor said this today at a 2-day media
workshop on Ethical Reporting on Children organised by UNICEF, held in Ibadan,
Oyo State.
Ejiofor
noted that if the media continue to report the children without following the
ethical guidelines and principles, such children would be at risk of
retribution consequently.
According
to her, "we all know that reporting on children and young people has its
special challenges. In some instances, the act of reporting on children places
them or other children at risk of retribution or stigmatization."
"Hence
the aim of this workshop is to share with journalists some developed guidelines
and principles that would assist them cover children in an age appropriate and
sensitive manner. The guidelines are meant to support the best intentions of
ethical reporter in serving the public interest without compromising the rights
of children", she added.
The
Director of School of Communication and Information Technology, Moshood Abiola
Polytechnic, Ogun State, Dr Goke Rauf while presenting a paper urged the
journalists to adhere strictly to the ethics of journalism profession,
particularly in reporting issues that concerned the children.
He
urged the journalists to equip themselves with child right act and other
relevant laws so as to guide against portraying the children in a way that
could subject them to embarrassment, ridicule and stigmatization.
According
to him, “In reporting, the truth, journalists should be guided by other values
which include national security, public interest, privacy of others, freedom of
others and more importantly, the child’s right especially when the matter
affect the children.”
“Also,
Nigerian mass media should brace up to their responsibilities and reclaim their
pride of place credible platform by doing all things possible to reverse the
trend where some lazy traditional media now rely on social media as source of
news items”, he said
Journalists
drawn from both print and broadcast media attended the workshop which was aimed
at intimating the journalists with some developed guidelines and principles
that would assist them in covering and reporting children in the best and most
appropriate way.
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