Press Council scribe cautions journalists against spreading fake news
Media
FRANCIS Nwosu, Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Press Council, says individuals or groups embraced fake news to ”deceive the public, cause ill feelings, influence views, push political agendas and cause disaffection”, warning media practitioners to desist from spreading fake news capable of threatening and jeopardizing the foundations of Nigeria’s democracy..
He said of fake news: “It is (usually) written and published with intent to mislead, in order to damage an entity, agency, or to gain financially or politically, using sensationalist, dishonest, and fabricated headlines to increase readership”.
In a paper titled, “Fake news: Why Science journalists must stay with science’’, he presented at the fourth Open Forum on Agricultural Biotechnology (OFAB) Nigeria media awards held on Friday in Abuja, Nwosu argued that fake news was both anti-ethical to the journalism profession and injurious to the polity.
“A cursory look at our polity will portray one at the mercy of fake news. Like in some other climes, the issue of fake news has become a serious challenge in our country.
“A school of thought had postulated that there had always been fake news. The difference today is that social media platforms have enabled fake news to spread widely and more quickly than ever before.
“While social media is the biggest source of fake news, the media gives prominence to it through publication of fictitious stories’’, the Executive Secretary said, while urging science journalists to be rigorous in double checking facts and presenting them in simple terms as much as they could.
In a speech at the event, Dr Ogbonnaya Onu, Minister of Science and Technology, called on science journalists to avoid fake news and focus on facts that promote the deployment of technology in agriculture, citing as an example how biotechnology tools, such as genetic engineering, were assisting many countries to address some of the challenges facing their agriculture.
Dr Rose Gidado, Country Coordinator, OFAB said journalists recognized at the event were those doing inspirational work, humanizing science and bringing it to the people for sustainable development in communities and the country at large
She noted that recognizing journalists in science reporting had never been more important than now, as the spread of false information was becoming the norm, saying that such false and malicious information were meant to undermine the big role science plays in solving present day challenges, including the COVID-19 pandemic, climate change, food insecurity, among others.
“Journalists serve as a bridge between science and society, they play a crucial role in informing and educating the public and policy makers on advances in science and technology, including agricultural biotechnology’’, she said.
NAN
– Nov. 21, 2020 @ 12:09 GMT |
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