INFLUENCE OF RADIO OWNERSHIP ON PROFESSIONAL JOURNALISM PRACTICE
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1 Background of the study
The Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria is the
Pioneer Broadcast Organization in Nigeria with a rich culture of excellence.
Available records reveal that Radio Broadcasting was introduced into Nigeria in
1933 by the then colonial Government. It relayed the overseas service of the
British Broadcasting Corporation through wired system with loudspeakers at the
listening end. The service was called Radio Diffusion System, RDS. From the RDS
emerged the Nigerian Broadcasting Services, NBS in April 1980. Prior to the
NBS, the colonial Government had commissioned the Nigerian Broadcasting survey,
undertaken by Messrs Byron and Turner which recommended the establishment of
stations in Lagos, Kaduna, Enugu, Ibadan and Kano. Mr. T.W. Chalmers, a Briton
and controller of the BBC Light Entertainment Programme was the first
Director-General of the NBS.
Radio ownership and control has since colonial times
been subjected more to political exigencies than economic forces. Successive
governments have, in the laws they enact and enforce, made it abundantly clear
that the press was at the mercy of politics, and that the political tune to
which a paper dances was enough to ensure its survival or death Abramsky,
(2005). The laws and their implementation have seldom encouraged private
investment in the media nor given radio proprietors reason to believe that it
is feasible to run it as a business by attracting advertisement revenue with
good circulation figures.
The government shows that it is more interested in
containing the media politically than in providing its proprietors and
practitioners the enabling economic environment they need for professional
excellence and financial independence. This has brought about the
underdevelopment of the press by imposing on it a series of constraints. No one
who knows what a radio looks like (in content and form) take seriously what is
passed on news Akpan, (2008), of course, some of the constraints to a vibrant,
professional and financially viable radio are obviously internal to the press
itself. However, even these so-called internal constraints can be explained by
the overt political control and administrative determination to stifle all
forms of creative and liberating difference from the status quo that a free
press of any kind might seek to encourage Beder, (2002). This necessarily means
privileging ignorance over knowledge, and encouraging media practitioners who
know little or care little about professionalism.
Thus, the first and main threat to
free-flow of information is still largely from wielders of political power,
efforts at economic liberalization notwithstanding (Konings, 2006). Control by
big business or financial magnates is perhaps a future danger, as overt
political interference has made it too risky for the business world to
contemplate any meaningful partnership with or investment in the press, the
critical private press in particular. During the monolithic era, the sole
political pace-setter was the government. Today, there is the added danger of
power elites other than the governing, manipulating the press in similar ways
if not worse.
Often, the journalists I have interviewed
tend to think, quite mistakenly, that the only real threat to their freedom and
independence comes from proprietors. This is quite understandable, given that
the government is directly responsible for repressive laws and their day to day
application, and given that the radio owners have consistently worked to keep
the press divided through sponsoring the creation of private papers or
thwarting attempts to create strong unions of media practitioners (Guiffo,
2003; Nyamnjoh, 2006; Nyamnjoh et al., 2006). This notwithstanding, it is
important for journalists to bear in mind that threats to their independence
could also come from big business, such as experienced from government. They
ought also to note that an equally dangerous threat could arise from
unwittingly playing into the hands of the power elite in the opposition, as
even they would agree has happened during democratic process. Among the
internal constraints to a free press (constraints induced, of course, by
governments and radio owners monolithic inclinations and severe laws over the
years), is the inadequacy of professionalism and unity among journalists.
The splits, squabbles and instability
we have witnessed among radio proprietors and journalists over the past eight
years of democratic struggle, mean that the press has been preoccupied more
with internal wrangles of its own, than with a conscious, concerted effort as
an institution, to pool their resources together and fight for better laws and
for persecuted journalists, as well as better inform their readership or
viewership Bleifuss, 2005. If journalists are more united and better organized,
they could resolve most of the problems that currently plague them and their
profession, even if such professional independence.
Lack of job security is equally a
constraint. Radio owners have capitalized on the helplessness of the
job-seekers, who have not been guaranteed regular salaries. No firm
arrangements are reached; as the owners are often more interested in whatever
commercial gain they can muster than in professional excellence. This has
inevitably led to prostitution by journalists or to what one may term a
hand-to-mouth journalism, if not a journalism of misery Burton, 2004. In 1994
and 1995 when I ran a series of training and refresher programmes for
journalists under the auspices of the Friedrich-Ebert Foundation in Cameroon,
it was not uncommon for journalists to show more interest in the perdiem that
the foundation paid them for attending, than in the training itself. Journalists
find themselves being forced to make unreliable promises to publish stories or
slip in an advert here or there; promises which have led to untold problems for
them. Any bit of money can lure a journalist to write anything, including
blackmail. Even with the official media, a journalist thinks that if he writes
this or that flattering article about this or that highly placed person in the
ruling party or in the administration, he could be recognised and promoted. The
main reason is that journalists do not receive good salaries and therefore have
to aspire to extra-professional appointments which can fetch them a little
more. The lack of job security has thus negatively affected professionalism as
journalists seek to make ends meet through unprofessional practices, usually
referred to derogatorily as 'le journalisme de Gombo' ('Soya Journalism' or
'bread and butter journalism') (cf. Tueno Tagne, 2006). Such gombo-isation of
the profession has, together with other factors, done much to devalue the
journalist and his product in public esteem (FFE, 2003, 2006).
The next type of constraint pertains
to financial difficulties that have compounded the problems of news-gathering
and news-production, and made papers even less credible as they stretch and
strain to make possible every single edition. The high death or hibernation
toll among radios Boh, (2007, p.193-230), is clear proof of these difficulties.
If currently there is little advertising in the press, and if industry and
commerce behave as though advertising were doing journalist a favour, this is
due largely to the very unprofessional approach to journalism of which the
press is guilty, but also to the fear on the part of businessmen, of drastic
government sanctions on anyone caught keen on investing in the private press.
Increased professionalism would most likely lead to high circulation and more
advertising, and consequently, more revenue for the publishers to invest in new
technology. It could also act as an incentive to big business to invest in the
media.
1.2 Statement of the Problem
Among the problems to a free press
(constraints induced, of course, by government's unchanging inclinations and
asphyxiating laws over the years), is the inadequacy of professionalism and
unity among journalists. Independence in journalism means freedom from all
obligations that might interfere with the fidelity to the public interest.
Therefore what the study wants to find out is; how does Radio Ownership Influences
Professional Journalism Practice?
1.3 Objectives of the Study
The broad objective of the study is
to determine Radio ownership as constraint for professional journalism practice
in FRCN.
1. To determine how journalist are
been restricted from their duty.
2. To ascertain the extent to which
journalist protect the confidentiality of their news sources
3. To determine how the constraints
can be solved.
1.4 Research Questions
1. How do journalists experience
restriction in the course of their duty?
2. To what extent do journalists
protect the confidentiality of their news sources?
3. What are the solutions to the
constraints faced by journalist?
1.5 Scope of the Study
There are ethical lights which guide
the journalistic enterprise. A good journalist is judged by the extent of his
commitment to these ideas of them acting based on their codes. The research
will be concerned with FRCN.
1.6 Significance of the Study
This study will help government
policy makers, radio owners, Journalist and all students conducting research on
the same topic. In the same vain it will be of immense help to the students in
Mass Communication department.
1.7 Definition of Terms:
1.7.1 Radio: The transmission and
reception of electromagnetic waves of radio frequency, esp. those carrying
sound messages.
1.7.2 Constraint: A limitation or
restriction.
1.7.3 Journalist: A person who writes
for newspapers or magazines or prepares news to be broadcast on radio or
television.
1.7.4 Proprietor: The owner of an
establishment
1.7.5 Professional: a person who is
expert at his or her work: You can tell by her comments that this editor is a
real professional.
1.7.6 Influence: The effect that a
person or thing has on someone's decisions, opinions, or behavior or on the way
something happens
No comments:
Post a Comment