Niger Delta
NGOs Partner Media To End Violence Against Women
Three non-governmental organisations, Coalition of Eastern Non-Governmental Organisations (CENGOs), Civil Resources Development and Documentation Centre (CIRDDOC) and Amplify Change (AC), have pledged to build bridges that would end Gender-Based Violence (GBV) and increase young people’s access to Sexual and Reproductive Human Rights (SRHRs) information and services in the society.
Speaking during a one-day media training programme in Port Harcourt, National Project Coordinator of CIRDDOC, Pascal Anozie said the programme was targeted at advocating against the rising spate of GBV in the society in order for policy makers to legislate and enforce legislation to curb the menace.
According to him, “It is our intention to make GBV more visible through the media influencing the society to acknowledge it as a problem and put pressure on policy makers to legislate against it and, where legislation already exists, to enforce such legislation.”
Anozie, who was represented by the Rivers State Coordinator of CENGOs, Dumka Emah-David added that the training was also planned to provide media practitioners with the necessary skills needed in sensitive reporting concerning victims of GBV.
Emah-David stressed the role of the media in changing gender stereotypes, and emphasised the need for media stakeholders to understand SRHRs and why GBV takes place and find ways to checking their consequences on women and families.
In her presentation, one of the resource persons and Managing Editor, National Point Newspaper, Constance Meju while elucidating on the topic: ‘Guidelines For Reporting Gender-Based Violence,’ said there were some standard rules on sensitive reporting bordering on facts, confidentiality, respect and empathy, which reporters must consider while writing or filing in their reports in order not to bring more shame, pain and stigmatisation to GBV victims, adding that GBV and SRHRs abuse demands public abhorrence for positive change in the society.
Also speaking, another resource person and Deputy Coordinator of CENGOs, Emem Okon said GBV includes honour killing, forced marriage, acid bath, female genital mutilation, murder, coercion, abusive language, beating and sexual harassment based on women’s subordinate status in the society.
Susan Serekara-Nwikhana
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