The Federal Government has said the war
against corruption remains the toughest of all the three cardinal issues
that it campaigned with before the conduct of the 2015 general
elections.
The other two cardinal points are revamping of the economy and tackling insecurity.
It, therefore, called on the media to
stop mocking the Federal Government over its declaration of war against
corruption in the country.
The Minister of Information and Culture,
Alhaji Lai Mohammed, stated this on Monday in Abuja at the opening of
the 68th General Assembly of the Broadcasting Organisation of Nigeria.
The theme of the conference was “The Media and the fight against corruption.”
Rather than mocking, Mohammed said the
media should join hands with the government in its determination to
stamp out corruption in the country. He said the fight must not be seen as
that of President Muhammadu Buhari alone, warning that corruption is
capable of killing the country if not well tackled.
He said, “Without mincing words, let me
use this platform to appeal directly to the media in general to join
this administration in facing down the problem of corruption.
“As we have said times without number,
this fight must not be seen as Buhari’s fight. It must not be seen as
the Federal Government’s fight. It is our fight. If we fail to win by
defeating corruption, it will simply kill us as a nation.
“This appeal to the media to join us in
the fight against corruption is borne out of the fact that the Fourth
Estate of the Realm cannot afford to sit on the fence, as far as this
fight is concerned. We are not saying the media should not criticise us
over our strategy for the fight, but they should stop mocking us.
“In recent times, it is not unusual to
read such headlines as ‘Buhari’s government losing anti-corruption war,’
‘Buhari’s anti-corruption war is failing,’ ‘Arewa Youths knock
President Buhari over failing anti-corruption war.’ This is sheer
mockery, not reporting! And this war is not Buhari’s war. It is our war.
“Make no mistake about it: Of all the
three broad issues that we campaigned with – revamping the economy,
fighting corruption and tackling insecurity, the toughest is the war
against corruption.”
While saying that most Nigerians were direct beneficiaries of corruption, he said others were subsidised by sleaze.
He appealed to the media to join the
war against corruption by writing strong editorials against it and also
donating air time for jingles.
In his address, the Acting Chairman of
the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Mr. Ibrahim Magu,
commended the roles played by the media in the past for advocacy and
crusading.
He, however, said, “Media practitioners
that are supposed to help fight corruption have unfortunately been
sucked into the cesspool of malfeasance. One of the difficult tasks I
faced soon after I took over as Acting Chairman of EFCC was having to
investigate senior journalists including media owners that partook of
the sharing of monies meant for arms to fight insurgency in the
North-East.
“It was shocking that even the ones that have since been arraigned in court, still don’t feel they did anything wrong!”
In his speech, the Chairman of BON, who is also Chairman of Channels Television, Mr. John Momoh, said that broadcasting stations were currently faced with many problems.
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