The Department for International Development (DFID) today organised a workshop for the stakeholders including the media, civil society organizations and some other groups in the South-West.
The
workshop, which was held at the Owu Crown Hotel in Ibadan, Oyo State was part
of the DFID programme anchored by the Partnership to Engage, Reform and Learn
(PERL) in the South West region.
The
workshop was part of the strategies to increase collaboration among the
stakeholders in ensuring adequate media engagement that would increase
citizens’ voice and influence policy decisions that would lead to delivery of
dividends of democracy to the people.
Members
of the Justice Development and Peace Makers’ Center, Development Agenda for
Western Nigeria and the Ogun Chamber of Commerce, Industry and Agriculture were
among the participants at the workshop.
The
Regional Team Leader of PERL, Mr Adewale Agbojo said the media, civil society
groups and other stakeholders must work together and engage the policy makers
on service delivery for the betterment of the society.
According
to him, the essence of the workshop was to broker relationship and provide
linkages amongst pro-change traditional and social media persons, organisations
and platforms, as well as other players and being engaged by PERL for more
productive engagement that would promote good governance.
Also,
PERL Regional Reform Facilitator, Mrs Chika Uwadi said the objective of the
workshop was to intimate identified traditional and social media platforms,
organisations and individuals on the need to serve as channels for amplifying
citizens’ voice for influencing policy and improving service delivery.
While
speaking, the Regional Partnership Facilitator of PERL said the workshop was
designed to facilitate the development of work-plan amongst the media and
partners for continuous discourse in the civic space that would influence
governance decisions.
Speaking
during the workshop, Dr Festus Adedayo, a member of the editorial board of the
Nigerian Tribune newspaper, said the media was no longer playing its roles as
it did during the era of military dictatorship in the country and that the
media was standing akimbo now under democracy.
“Newspapers
in Nigeria are no longer ideological and the economy is also not helping matters,
while ownership issue is also another serious factor inhibiting the media from
playing its roles. The situation is frustrating and dispiriting and demands
immediate solutions.”
Adedayo
also lamented the problem of quackery in the journalism profession and the lack
of professionalism among the practitioners. He urged the media to be alive to
its responsibility and play its roles well for the betterment of the society.
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