Niger Delta
Journalists Urged To Uphold National Interest In Reportage
Ahead of the February
national polls, a veteran journalist, Mr Dele Ailemen, has urged Nigerian journalists to put the nation’s interest first in their reportage during and after the elections.
Ailemen, a former chairman of the defunct Bendel State Council of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), said in Benin that the role of journalists in the elections was crucial to the sustenance of the nation’s democracy.
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) had in 2014 released a timetable for the elections with the Presidential and National Assembly elections fixed for February 14.
State Assemblies and governorship elections are to hold on February 28.
“People must come to the understanding that the idea of democracy will collapse, that the tree of democracy cannot survive if we do not allow the sunshine of press freedom to come in.
This means that journalists must see that first and foremost our responsibility is not to political parties, but to the nation.
“This is because the supreme interest of a politician is his own survival and not the survival of the media.
“I think our duty as members of the fourth estate of the realm is to see to the survival of the nation’’.
Ailemen, who is the coordinator of an NGO — Media and Political Forum – noted that the responsibilities imposed on the media were onerous.
“We have an obligation first and foremost to the media as an institution.
“Our responsibility is not loyalty to individual politicians or any political party,” he said.