Date: Thursday 12 January 2012
Time: 15.30-17.00
Venue: Room 1A41, Pieter de la Court building, Wassenaarseweg 52,
Leiden
Speaker: Idris Akinbajo, reporter for Next and Premium Times in
Nigeria, and FAIR Investigative Journalism Award winner 2011
Chair:
Stephen Ellis, ASC
You are kindly requested to register for this seminar.
According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Nigerian
political leaders have stolen US$1 trillion of the country’s money since
independence in 1960. Corruption permeates many, if not all, strata of
the public and private sectors so one might think that investigating and
reporting it would not be difficult. This is not the case however and
investigative reporting faces massive challenges. There are not enough
databases, there is no functional Freedom of Information (FOI) law yet,
and public officials do not feel compelled to give anyone any official
information. Much of the media is either state owned or is owned by
politicians from both the ruling and opposition parties. Few are
interested in investigative journalism as a means of fighting
corruption. However, Nigeria is fortunate in having some investigative
journalists for whom the fight against corruption is a mission.
In a climate where real data are scarce and officials do not want to
talk, allegations of corruption are bandied about. The first challenge
is therefore to find the stories that are about ‘real’ corruption and
not just allegations that are meant to weaken a political opponent. The
next step is then to find a story that is a priority and will have the
greatest impact either by the amount of money involved or due to its
systemic element. If a story can put the spotlight on an entire state
agency, this is preferable to merely exposing an individual.
Finally, it is possible to arrive at a kind of reporting that actually
contributes to dismantling corrupt mechanisms and replaces them with
better ones. An example is the award-winning six-part series on
corruption in the Nigerian Oil Ministry and its agencies in
NEXT
Newspapers that was published between April and June
2011. In addition to showing the payment of bribes for licences to
import refined petroleum products, these stories also highlighted serial
violations of rules and guidelines laid down in the allocation of oil
blocks and the licensing of crude lifting contracts. However, dealing
with systemic corruption requires a partnership between investigative
journalists and active corruption fighters in the state machinery in
Nigeria itself. This is increasingly happening and Nigeria has seen some
improvements recently as a result.
See his
bio
See his
article that won the 2011 FAIR Investigative Journalism Award and the
2011 Editors' Courage Award
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