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No Show! Mr Senior Journalist Or Editor

Thu, 12 Jan 2012 Source: Mensah, Nathaniel

“Journalists aren’t supposed to praise things. It’s a violation of work rules almost

as serious as buying drinks with our own money or absolving the CIA of something”

P.J O’Rourke

The infamous presidential forum for editors and senior journalists in the country by

and large is becoming a culture that could become a very meaningful practice within

the Ghanaian political landscape.

Three years down the streak, the interruption with senior journalists and editors by

the president have greatly improve over the years as without any doubt it help

strengthen the democratic tenets of the country.

Barely would a journalist be it senior or junior have the opportunity to pose daring

questions to a president more especially within our political system where

bureaucracy and autocratic leadership has become the order of the day coming in

handy with a lot of frustration.

Further more, presidents meeting with the press personally I think should be the

neck cracker to fortifying the accountability scenery of our state institutions of

which the executive arm of government fall.

Holding public officials accountable is very paramount to spiraling the sanctity of

governance at all levels as it put the system on its toes.

According to best practices, journalists have as part of their role in a state to

ensure checks and balances not withstanding their conventional role as the fourth

arm of the realm.

Are Ghanaian journalists losing focus of their basic mandate or it’s just a share

fantasy of glimmering in the title of senior journalist or editor?

One thing which has continually baffled me is whether the Ghanaian journalist is

conscious of what defines him as a journalist or it’s just a duty of serving as a

share political publicist.

The last time some journalists had the chance to interrupt with the president, the

outcome was a disaster with many Ghanaians criticizing not the people who asked the

questions but the nature and manner most of the questions were posed to the

president eliciting irrelevant answers as a result of irrelevant questions.

My wonder is whether these senior journalists continue to let the ordinary Ghanaian

down as a result of failure to do enough research or mere negligence. Is it proper

to conclude that what we are witnessing is a reflection of how they do their job as

watch dogs?

My beef is, if the media can let go of golden opportunities like the editors forum

to ask more reflective questions such as what the government is doing to alleviate

the many plights of Ghanaians like the recent fuel increase, the poor nature of

roads in my village, no portable water, schools under trees etc. but have chosen to

sing praises and timidly ignore the issues that worry the average Ghanaians, then

the future of independent press and press freedom is at a risk.

As it is now, the opportunity is gone. We can only hope and pray that tomorrow

present us with more of such editors forum with less of such errors from senior

journalists.

The reality though is that many of such opportunities will present themselves in the

future but the onus lies with the press to prove they deserve it and actually merit

it.

Source: NATHANIEL MENSAH

www.niiequaye@yahoo.co.uk/www.natmensah.blogspot.com

Columnist: Mensah, Nathaniel