Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has commended Nigerian journalists over their civic vigilance and steadfast belief in rule of law.
Osinbajo’s spokesperson, Laolu Akande, in a statement on Monday, said the vice president received at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, the National Executive of the Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ) led by its President, Mr Chris Isiguzo.
Osinbajo reminded journalists that, like other Nigerians, the country also belonged to them.
“Whether we are press, politicians or religious people, the country is ours, and we must do everything to ensure that the country remains safe, secure and united, and this so important.
“I thank you for your civic vigilance, for the very kind words you have spoken about Nigeria, and for remaining steadfast in your belief for the rule of law and press freedom in the country.
“As I keep saying, the elite in our country, those of us who have had the benefit of education, positions and all of that; we owe millions of our people who are poor; who have no access and have no voice, a duty to ensure that we don’t let things become worse for them.”
He said that the press and government had collaborated to protect the information space, and called on stakeholders in Nigeria to replicate such efforts in the interest of security and unity.
According to him, there are so many countries faced with a national challenge where some people are prepared to subvert the entire republic.
Osinbajo said that the press worked actively with government to ensure that the information space was protected in such a way that people who wanted to subvert the republic were not allowed to do so.
“But I think it is important because your voices as respected members of the fourth estate of the realm, your voices are very important in moderating the kinds of views that we hear constantly which in the end; if care is not taken, subverts the polity.
“It is important for us to continue to emphasise that the unity of this country is crucial because if this country breaks up in any way or becomes the subject of what some people will like it to be, all of us will lose out.
“Obviously, the elite will survive in any way but the vast majority of our people will not.
“So, I will urge that we should as much as possible do whatever we can in our spaces that we occupy to keep emphasising that we cannot afford a situation where the national unity of this country is compromised or where the country is made the theatre of conflict and all sorts of insurgencies and crimes,” he said.
Earlier, Isiguzo commended Federal Government’s initiatives in the areas of employment opportunity creation and skills training for the youth, among others.
He said that, in acknowledgment of its role in the society, the union had over the years, engaged in training and retraining of journalists with assistance from various development partners.
The NUJ president said the union was building capacity of journalists to effectively bring to public attention humanitarian situations in the country in a fair manner, honestly and constructively.
Isiguzo said that NUJ always frowned at fake news and would do everything in its powers to check the menace of fake news.
He called on journalists to be careful not to be tempted into propagating fake news by ensuring proper and adequate checks before stories are written and transmitted for public consumption.
The NUJ president also restated the call for a bailout fund to be provided for the media industry.
“Many media houses are forced to cut salaries or lay off their workers because of the increasing difficulty to sustain operations,” he said.
National executive members of the union present at the meeting included the Deputy President, Mukhtar Gidado; National Secretary, Shuaibu Leman; President of the National Association of Women Journalists (NAWOJ), Ladi Bala; and FCT Chairman of the union, Mr Emmanuel Ogbeche.