Security
and Response Agencies in the country have been tasked on the need to be
credible in their dealings with the media if the public must continue
to repose confidence in those who are paid to protect them.
Former
Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to the late President Umaru Musa
Yar'Adua, Mr Segun Adeniyi stated this Wednesday in Abuja while
delivering a paper at the ongoing Seminar on Media Engagement in Crisis
Situations for Security and Response Agencies. The seminar is organized
by the Centre for Crisis Communication CCC with support from the Defence
Headquarters DHQ and the Nigeria Stability and Reconciliation Programme
NSRP.
Entitled, "Media Perception of the
Service Delivery of Security and Response Agencies in Nigeria", the
paper held that Nigerians do not place much trust in their security and
response agencies.
He said although the role of
the media is to tell the stories of these agencies with facts and
figures but the onus is on the agencies to always make themselves
available to the media.
"Down-playing the role of the media in national security can only encourage rumour-mongering", he said.
He
urged the agencies and the media to have a defined rule of engagement
especially in critical situations which requires tactful reporting so as
not to give away tips to criminals who are on the run.
Adeniyi
who is the Chairman of the Editorial Board of ThisDay Newspapers said
security agencies must begin to build respect for themselves. They must
send a clear message to criminals that when they kill an operative, they
cannot get away with it, he said.
He
recalled the killing of DSS operatives few years ago by members of the
Ombatse sect in Alakyo, Nasarawa state, and lamented that rather than
going after the killers, the then leadership of the DSS declared that
the Service had forgiven the killers even while the corpses of the
operatives had not been retrieved and their loved ones still mourning.
Contributing
to the paper, a former Director of Defence Information, Brigadier
General MM Yerima said information managers should strive to build trust
with the media as well as some level of interpersonal relations with
journalists.
"The
moment you are not honest with them, they will strike you", he said
principals of agencies should also be timely in given adequate briefings
to their information managers because the news has to be reported and
journalists would not wait for hours on end to get confirmation from
crisis communicators.
The Seminar will come to an end on Thursday April 28, 2016 with a Communique.
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