x

House Of Reps Commences Debate On Bill To Protect Journalists, Stiffer Punishment For Quacks In The Profession

By Dauda R Pam Maiduguri

The House of Representatives has indicated its interest to improve on the welfare of media practitioners, as it will be debating on a Bill to sanitize the media in Nigeria, and to protect journalists against non-payment of salaries.

The Press Council Amendment Bill, will enter Second Reading  as the National Assembly resumes plenary  after a six week long break.

It will  also among others, raise the minimum qualification for journalism practice, define who a journalist is and stipulate stiffer punishment for quacks.

Sponsor of the Bill and Chairman, House Committee on Narcotics Drugs, Representative Ottah Agbo, said that the Bill which was stood down from debate  in honour of late Representative Ossy Prestige, would further restore lost glory to journalism in the country.

In a statement by his media aide, Andrew Agbese, the lawmaker explained that “the Bill has aroused interest in the media, given the extent quacks and fakes have infiltrated the industry, bringing the image of journalists to an all time low in Nigeria.

According to him, “In Nigeria, journalism is the only profession assigned specific responsibility of holding government to account in section 22 of the 1999 Constitution. Yet it is the most bastardised, a free for all profession with no clear qualification guideline and sadly too, its regulatory bodies like the Press Council, NUJ, Guild of Editors, Newspapaer Proprietors Association at best, can only bark without biting. 

This has prompted some critical thinkers to now say journalism is not a profession but a mere trade.

While condemning the indiscriminate influx of people without requisite industry training into the profession, the lawmaker pointed out that “most people feel that once you are jobless and you can afford a jotter, pen and a midget to record voices, you can automatically ply the profession of journalism. And such people go about blackmailing people, especially public servants as well as assaulting democracy and its sacred institutions.

He added that the legislation will address these challenges  by redefining  and refining the media industry and by extension, strengthening democracy.

“Less noble professions are well regulated and respected, so why should journalism, the profession beyond compare, remain an all comers affair in this century?” he quipped

Hot this week

Kaduna Highlights 15% Health Budget Milestone at #OpenKaduna Health Sector Policy Dialogue

By Achadu Gabriel, KadunaKaduna State hosted policymakers, traditional...

Abuja, Becoming Epicentre of Africa’s Creativity – Mahmoud

By Joyce Remi-BabayejuFCT Minister of State, Dr. Mariya Mahmoud...

BusinessMetrics praises NUPRC’s digital compliance systems and licensing reforms for boosting

BusinessMetrics, an independent industry performance evaluator, says the Nigerian...

Asia and Nigeria Strengthen Ties as 7th Asian Film Festival Opens in Abuja

The 7th Asian Film Festival has commenced in Abuja...

CSOs Celebrate Akpabio with 5th Annual Lecture, Hail NASS–Executive Synergy

…..Pledges expanded civic actions and pro-development campaigns in 2026Rising-Up...

I Always Seek My Wife’s Permission Before Acting Romantic Scenes — Nosa Rex

Nollywood actor Nosa Rex has disclosed that he always...

Regina Daniels Says She Has No Plans to Remarry After Split From Ned Nwoko

Nollywood actress Regina Daniels has explained why she is...

Ancelotti Names Club He Believes Will Stop Arsenal in the Champions League

Brazil head coach Carlo Ancelotti has predicted that Arsenal...

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img