SOYINKA DECRIES ARBITRARY USE OF TERROR BY SECURITY FORCES AS CENTRE
TURNS TEN
PROFESSOR WOLE SOYINKA DELIVERS A THOUGHT PROVOKING SPEECH RECENTLY
Wole Soyinka, Nobel Laureate
and human rights activist, has called on the Muhammadu Buhari led government to
move swiftly to end the recurrence of arbitrary use of force on civilians by
security forces, especially representatives of the Nigerian Army. The call was
one of the major highlights of the keynote remark made by Soyinka at the tenth anniversary
of the Wole Soyinka Award for Investigative Reporting hosted by the Wole
Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism yesterday in Lagos.
Soyinka’s lament came on the
heels of recurring reported cases and picture evidences of the regular unleash
of terror on mostly unarmed and helpless Nigerians by the men in uniform whose
constitutional role is to protect the people.
The Nobel Laureate emphasised that having come out of a difficult
twenty-nine year military rule, Nigerians must be allowed to enjoy the freedom
that democracy promises. He
also raised other concerns including issues of contempt of court and unauthorised
detention.
At the award presentation event, two
honorary prizes, the lifetime award for journalistic excellence and the
anti-corruption defender award were presented respectively to veteran
broadcaster, Bimbo Oloyede and immediate past Chairman of the Independent
Electoral Commission (INEC), Professor Attahiru Jega, who was represented by
his former personal assistant, Abdullahi Usman. Also, twelve journalists were
celebrated for their outstanding work. Five
of these became Soyinka Laureates, four made the runners-up list and four were
commended for a job well done, one of the finalists having made both the
commended work and laureate list.
Adekunle
Yusuf of The Nation was commended for his story, ‘How Corruption, Leadership
Hamper NDLEA’s Drug War’ which details challenges of compromise ravaging
Nigeria’s drug law enforcement agency. Yusuf also doubled as the winner of the
print category with his piece ‘Inside the Oil Deals That Cost Nigeria
Billions’, yet another account of the corruption plaguing Nigeria’s oil and gas
sector. In her work, ‘Ovum Trading: Inside Nigeria’s Multi-Million Naira Human
Egg Business’ which was selected as the runner-up in the print category, Motunrayo
Joel of The Punch Newspaper called the public’s attention to a dangerous and
quietly growing issue of sales of human egg by young girls.
The photo
story, ‘Soldiers punish a civilian at
Mararaba, Nasarawa State’ by Ikechukwu Ibe of The Daily Trust which was
the winning work and the commended piece, ‘Mercy please, mercy’ by Ayodele Ojo of The Sun, both vivid images
of the high handedness of soldiers, served as reference points on the need to
curb the excesses of security forces in the country. Adedayo Odusanya of The
Punch was runner up in the category with his photo titled, ‘Double Jeopardy’, a picture of students whose
classroom was in an open space sandwiched between stenches from a refuse dump
and an abandoned cemetery.
In the
editorial cartoon category, Chukwuemeka Emenike of The New Telegraph was
declared runner up for his piece, ‘No
Retreat, No Surrender’, which commented on the challenges with mutinying
soldiers in the fight against Boko Haram, while ‘Chasing shadows’, Asukwo Bassey’s cartoon, published in the Business Day
Newspaper, highlighting the challenge of motion without movement by Nigeria’s
anti-corruption agencies in the fight against menace, was selected winner of
the category.
True to
the observation of the judges’ board on the poor performance of the broadcast
media over the years, one person each made the shortlist in the television and
radio categories. Sumner Sambo of Television Continental won the television
category with his story on ‘Cattle
Rustling in Northern Nigeria’, a narrative on the ordeal cattle rearers in Northern
Nigeria face in the hands of an armed notorious group. Kikelomo Ifekoya of the Federal Radio
Corporation of Nigeria (FRCN) on her part was commended for again bringing to
the fore the now increasing case of domestic violence with her piece, ‘Domestic
violence against women’.
In the online category, Bassey Udo of
Premium Times was commended for his story, ‘Inside the Huge Scam Leading to Sale of Nigeria’s Aluminium Plant, ALSCON, to
Russia’s RUSAL’ a narration of how the Nigerian government used the
Russian Aluminium, RUSAL as front to perpetuate corrupt practices. Fisayo Soyombo of The Cable was selected
as the runner-up for the category with his series, ‘Ebola in Liberia, an account of the corruption that attended the
Ebola Fund while also reminding many of the high costs of the spread of the
epidemic from Liberia to Nigeria. Emmanuel Ogala’s piece, ‘Investigation: Jonathan,
Alison-Madueke, Tunde Ayeni, named in fraudulent oil contracts that cost Nigeria
billions’, an elaborate emphasis on the rut in Nigeria’s oil and gas sector won
the category. Ogala, was also the lucky winner of the 2015 WSCIJ-Nigerian
Investigative Journalist of the year award.
The opening formalities of the milestone
award celebration of the centre for investigative journalism commenced at
5:05pm with speeches on the importance of the media to shaping and ensuring
social justice in Nigeria by the Centre’s board chair, Ropo Sekoni, the Deputy
Ambassador to the Netherlands Embassy, Michel Deelen and the General Manger Policy, Government and Public Affairs, Chevron, Deji Haastrup while Abigail Ogwezzy-Ndisika, an
Associate Professor of Mass Communication with the University of Lagos
presented the 2015 judges’ report.
The event, which was made lively by
folklore songs by Kininso Koncepts, a theatre art group from the University of
Lagos as well as great the moderating flair of the duo of Deji Bademosi, Executive
Director of TV360 and Funke Treasure-Durodola, Managing Director of Radio One,
had about two hundred guests, including students of journalism, leaders of the
media industry, journalists, private sector experts and members of the
diplomatic corps, in attendance. The ceremony was closed with an award for ten
years’ meritorious service to one of the Centre’s member of Staff, Yakubu Afuye
and an appreciation remark by Mr Jiti Ogunye, the Board Secretary.
As
part of the tenth year anniversary celebration, the WSCIJ today, hosted a public viewing
of its documentary, ‘Report Women: The Untold Stories of Girls and Women in
Nigeria’, at the Silver Bird Galleria, Ikeja, Lagos. The documentary also marks
the human rights day and the end of the
‘orange the world’ sixteen-day United Nation led campaign to end every form of
violence against girls and women globally.
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