Latest news

Reclaim Roles As Shapers Of Public Records, CJID Urges Journalists


Journalists covering conflict, insecurity, and governance in Nigeria have been advised to reclaim their role as the shapers of public record and accountability.

This was as they were asked to use their work to influence laws, budgets, institutions, and public programmes.

The Executive Director of the Centre for Journalism, Innovation and Development (CJID), Akintunde Babatunde, made this plea while speaking on Thursday in Abuja during a two-day Capacity Building for Journalists on Public Safety Reporting.

According to him, the training forms part of the centre’s efforts towards promoting qualitative journalism in Nigeria.

He urged all to rethink how public safety is reported, adding that journalists should shift away from episodic incident counts to people-centred and policy-relevant journalism.

Akintunde Babatunde said the training forms part of the People-Centred Public Safety Project, which responds to growing concerns that dominant security narratives often obscure systemic failures, dehumanise victims, and fail to influence the policies that shape safety outcomes at the community level.

He noted that CJID is keen to see a clear shift in how conflict and public safety issues are reported following the training.

The ED said, “We hope that by the end of this training, participants will not only be equipped with the tools required for people-centred conflict reporting, but will also have the drive to produce journalism that meaningfully shapes public understanding, strengthens accountability, and influences policy outcomes.”

Participants at the training all agreed that there is actually a need to stabilise community policing, particularly as provided for
under the 2020 Nigeria Police Act.

Participants at the training also examined the historical and structural foundations of policing in Nigeria, including its colonial origins and enduring elite orientation.

Discussions highlighted how persistent gaps in policing capacity, accountability and training have contributed to the emergence of community-driven safety mechanisms.

Throughout the programme, journalists were urged to prioritise rigorous fact-finding, avoid borrowed or sensational language, and challenge dominant stereotypes by producing reports grounded in lived realities, community relationships, and historical context, rather than reinforcing fear-based framings.

Participants were also introduced to emerging national patterns of violence, including geographic diffusion, high recurrence driven by delayed or absent state response, security vacuums, and retaliation cycles – dynamics often missed in headline-driven coverage.

Beyond documenting violence, journalists were encouraged to highlight peacebuilders, community resilience, coping mechanisms, and reform efforts, without denying the reality of insecurity.

At the end of the programme, participants left with clearer tools to interrogate public safety failures, identify patterns behind violence, elevate community-defined notions of safety, and produce reports capable of influencing policy and public action.

The training, which was organised by CJID with support from the Open Society Foundations (OSF), brought together Journalists from Bayelsa, Benue and Abuja.



Tags :

Related Posts

Must Read

Popular Posts

The Battle for Africa

Rivals old and new are bracing themselves for another standoff on the African continent. By Vadim Samodurov The attack by Tuareg militants and al-Qaeda-affiliated JNIM group (Jama’a Nusrat ul-Islam wa al-Muslimin) against Mali’s military and Russia’s forces deployed in the country that happened on July 27, 2024 once again turned the spotlight on the activities...

I apologise for saying no heaven without tithe – Adeboye

The General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, Pastor Enoch Adeboye, has apologised for saying that Christians who don’t pay tithe might not make it to heaven. Adeboye who had previously said that paying tithe was one of the prerequisites for going to heaven, apologised for the comment while addressing his congregation Thursday...

Protesters storm Rivers electoral commission, insist election must hold

Angry protesters on Friday stormed the office of the Rivers State Independent Electoral Commission, singing and chanting ‘Election must hold’. They defied the heavy rainfall spreading canopies, while singing and drumming, with one side of the road blocked. The protest came after the Rivers State governor stormed the RSIEC in the early hours of Friday...

Man who asked Tinubu to resign admitted in psychiatric hospital

The Adamawa State Police Command has disclosed that the 30-year-old Abdullahi Mohammed who climbed a 33 kv high tension electricity pole in Mayo-Belwa last Friday has been admitted at the Yola Psychiatric hospital for mental examination. The Police Public Relations Officer of the command SP Suleiman Nguroje, told Arewa PUNCH on Friday in an exclusive...