Monday, April 29, 2019


LELC Media Centre: Getting Inside Project


Getting Inside Project is a social-driven entrepreneurship endeavour with a three-prong focus: 
  • Getting Inside Me Project
  • Getting Inside Story and 
  • Getting Inside Project. 

Getting Inside Me Project (GIME) is a Self-Awareness Vulnerability Indices Pointer targeted at all gender. It helps girls and women in particular to navigate personal challenges they face at school and workplace.

Getting Inside Story is an Investigative focus on gender-based issues, education, science, crime, health, environment, civic intelligence, and governance.

Getting Inside Project focuses on media career development, mentoring and training of young undergraduate journalists, up and coming journalists and broadcasters including mid-career practitioners in the media industry.

Between October and December 2018, Getting Inside Project trained over 30 journalists early and mid-career journalist and 28 mass communication interns across electronic broadcast organisations, print and online.

ABOUT GETTING INSIDE ME PROJECT (GIME)

On 11 October, 2018, Getting Inside Me Projected collaborated with the Ministry of Women’s Affair, NAWOJ, Association Against Sexual and Gender Based Violence (AASGBV) and CMD Foundation to Mark International Day of the Girl Child with 100 Girls of  Westend Secondary School,  Asaba.


The leadership goal of GIME was to mentor 100 Girls. I collaborated with Nigeria Association of Women Journalists (NAWOJ), Ministry of Women Affairs,  Association Against Sexual and Gender Based Violence (AASGBV) and CMD Foundation to deliver a speech-workshop tagged Getting Inside Me Project on how students can use a Getting Inside Me Diary to reflect their career options, career plans, personal thoughts, goals, challenges and solutions to them to help them see patterns in their life early on so they can spot on time their natural capacities and career options open to them to pursue: International Day of Girls: https://medium.com/@ladyeumukoro/international-day-of-the-girl-2018-every-child-matters-7777a338a8d8
                                  



Following this event, with the help of different school administrators, counsellors, teachers, students, police and anti-cult unit in Delta State, I was able to carry out a successful undercover story on why there is a Rise of Secret-Cult-Gangs in Secondary Schools Among Female Students. This in turn informed the idea behind the Mentor-A-School Project I began concurrently as a Social Civic-Intelligence response in giving support to the community to curb this menace. Thereafter, the investigative story was published online, posted on all social media and YouTube including a two-day spread on Pointer Newspaper.

A follow-up advocacy awareness about this menace to amplify the story to a wider audience was done on Bridge Radio 98.7 FM to talk about the undercover investigation into the menace of secret-gang-cults in schools affecting both girls and boys, how they are recruited, code words/dress codes they use, tips to help parents recognised if their child has been approached or joined, and how children can come out of these cults with support from their school, parents, the judiciary and police. The thrust of the investigation shows that it takes a village to curb the menace.

During the undercover investigation, it was found that:

Teenage girls from 10-16 years are given 3 initiation options: to pay registration fee between N3,000 – N4,000; have sex with several boys (up to 10 or more in number); or be severely flogged (a euphemism for physical abuse and assault).

Sex, money and power was at the root of why girls were targeted aggressively.

Gang rape masked as initiation rites exposed girls to demeaning acts, drugs, alcohol, emotional and physical abuse.

Girls who tend to ‘fall for’ secret-gang-cults are those more prone to lying, cheating, stealing, curious about sex, have strong sex drive, or come from home where they have been toughed-up with constant emotional abuse, neglect, condemnation, physical beatings or lack parental attention, discipline and love.




Mentor-A-School Project (Getting Inside Me Project, GIME)

This project was created in response to the investigative story about secret-cult-gangs in two secondary schools in Delta. Interested school administrators are currently working out how to establish a media club in schools to keep students creatively engaged with a view to introducing them to new career pathways in media, writing, speaking and tech skills development.


Two selected schools in Delta were chosen for this purpose. A total of 228 students from Westend Mixed Secondary School and Ugbolu Secondary School in Delta State were mentored.

The focus was to achieve four key goals:

To promote anti secret-gang-cult awareness and the need to complete their education

To create deliberate awareness in boys about the synergistic value girls add in achieving a balanced society

To awaken students to their five capacities and how to tap into each for wealth creation, career choice and personal fulfilment

To inspire girls not to limit their career options or be carried away by negative peer influence

Introduce Girls to the Getting-Inside-Me-Diary Project for Self-Awareness and Mindfulness



STORY IMPACT:

On Monday 26th November at 9:21 a.m. following the publication of, and amplification of the story, Getting Inside Project (GIP) office received a call from a member of the Council of SPC explaining that one of the hideouts and area used for initiation by the cultists, the St. Patrick’s Church Asaba, began work on fixing broken walls and raising the perimeter fence securing the premises by two coaches to prevent access into the premises for such purposes.  Incidentally, I was informed that the premises was been used by armed robbers to hide away their guns used for operations, which they often go back to retrieve for future robberies. I was told that this story on secret-cult-gangs which I published gave them the jolt to take action.

On Monday November 3rd 2018, GIP went to verify this. The entire length of the perimeter fence has been raised by extra coaches and the holes in the fence have been closed up.
            

Following the report of the investigative report, many students became emboldened to quit cultism and gangsterism. In January 2019, One of the Principals’ whose students were victims explained to GIP in detail that a large number of the students (over 50) who were victims approached the school to renounce. The cult ‘leaders’ greatest concern was the drastic drop in weekly and monthly dues should they allow any reduction in the number of recruits. The more the members, the more money they make.

A follow-up impact assessment response was carried out to determine how schools, parents and affected victims of cultism and gangsterism are taking action since the story broke in October 2018 till date of this publication. It showed that over 30 students have since renounced their membership with many more students ready to come out. This is progress that must be sustained.


The story on Secret-Cult-Gangs Among Females in Secondary Schools in Delta was published in a 2-Part Series in Pointer Newspaper on Wednesday 24th October and Friday 26th October 2018 and on https://ladyechannel.blogspot.com/2018/10/secret-cult-gangs-disturbing-rise-of.html

News Agency of Nigeria also picked up the story and it was thereafter amplified by more than 25 online news outlets:


Radio Advocacy Awareness on female secret-gang-cults in secondary schools on Bridge Radio: https://youtu.be/JOi1qa9JNMg


Undercover investigation: Confessions of a Female Gang Member: https://youtu.be/l6-5VD3XdR8

Undercover report: How Secondary School Girls are recruited: https://youtu.be/R8Z9CTbqOow





GETTING INSIDE PROJECT (GIP) 

Media Career Development Training


To address the gap in career advancement among journalists in Delta State, GIP carried out workshop training with Female Journalists, Mass Communication Interns, Members of Nigeria Union of Journalists and Online Publishers.

Workshop, Panel Discussion and Lecture on Managing 'Fake News' in Traditional Media, Online and Social Media 

   GIP worked in collaboration with Delta Online Publishers Forum to run a lecture and workshop on digital skills for online publishers on. The training focused on the need to be intentional about how online and traditional media need to change their approach to covering and reporting
news.

It was equally important to heighten all aspects of self-check, professionalism and consequences of poor reportage during the panel discussion with stakeholders from across academia, civil societies, the judiciary, government and by journalists. Achieving this was at the heart of the call-to-action to all online publishers and reporters to improve our craft.


An online coverage of the panel discussion was produced based on the resolutions, suggestions and action steps to be taken by all stakeholders to tackle the menace of disinformation, malinformation, information disorders, rumours, and other false stories going forward and in preparation for 2019 elections.


The third goal of this collaboration was to be intentional about maintaining continuous advocacy on all media channels about the negative impact of fake news (a redundant term) by helping audiences differentiate between the different types of ‘fake news’: disinformation, malinformation, information disorders, rumours, weaponisation of information, conspiracy theories, false data, and false stories.


Online links: The Role of Media in 2019 election and Management of all forms of Fake News online and traditional media:

-          How Online Media Publishers can Prevent Proliferation of Disinformation:

-          Role of Media in Collaborative Investigative Journalism:

-          Impact of Social Media on Political Campaign and Nigeria 2019 Elections




 Media Career Development for 

Mass Communication Interns


     A 2-Day Training Workshop and Mentoring Session with Mass Communication Interns at Pointer Newspaper on: Gender Reporting and Career Path Options in the Media Industry:

The training focused on:
  1. Writing authentic content
  2. Developing a strong sense for news anywhere
  3. Gender reporting,
  4. Building self-confidence,
  5. Collaboration and
  6. Career choice options in the media industry


Interns were introduced to the Getting Inside Me Diary to analyse their self-development goals and career path identification in the media industry.
During the training, data gathered showed that: 

  • Out of the 25 attendees, only 3 were males
  • More than two-thirds of the students were bored-stiff with print journalism
  • Many said it was not a course of first choice
  • Others complained of poor teaching styles, tools, and incentives to study
  • Many did not think a story idea can come from them unless they were told what to cover
  • Of the 25 who were given a story idea to report, only 3 had completed their stories for submission one week after assignments were given
  • All of them were OND students. Many said they won’t follow-up the course at HND level.

Day 2: Media Career Plan – From Internship to Professional Practice.
In attendance were 21 interns: 7 males and 14 females. Of these number:
  • 3 indicated they wanted to be bloggers and wanted to know how to achieve this
  • 4 indicated they would like to be reporters
  • 8 preferred to work on radio or TV stations as presenters or newscasters
  • 5 were unsure which field to settle in
  • One was an NYSC member who schooled in Ghana and was back to Nigeria for his NYSC
  • Age range was 21 – 28 years


Workshop covered: different types of beats, storytelling, blogging, approaches to investigative journalism, intentional search for developmental stories, developing strong nose for news, improving gender reporting lens, balance reporting, self-development opportunities, skills development in writing, researching, interviewing, speaking, and amplifying stories to bring about impact.
POST TRAINING:
Students were more revved up to pursue journalism after the workshop.  Acting General Manager of Pointer Newspaper requested for a similar workshop on gender-balance in storytelling for upper management in 2019.




TESTIMONIALS:

Lovelyn Oseji (ND2): “After the training with Lady E, I was able to confidently write 3 stories. Something I was afraid I couldn’t do before. I wrote a story on Water Scarcity in Ogwashi-uku, edited a police press release on Cultists Killing Cultists and now I know how to analyse and report a charge sheet from court after I covered a criminal case of a man who stole from a woman who owned a filling station. The man turned out to be the woman’s friend.”

Kingdom Zorzor (NYSC Batch B1): “I am now a more confident speaker since the training and I speak more freely than I used to be. Unlike before when I used to keep to myself, after I was taught the importance of collaborating with my colleagues, I now do it easily.  I have also become more observant of people’s attitude too, and have also written more than 6 stories since the training. I intend writing a report about this training and have it published in Pointer.”

Ugah Juliet (ND2): “My confidence has seriously improved. I used to be very shy before but after the training I learnt how to communicate better and I have been using my GIME Personal Career Diary taught to us to use to write my career plan. I also wrote two feature stories after we were encouraged to think of more stories we find interesting to write. I wrote one on general entertainment and the other on food spice.”

Nwakpa Gloria (ND2): “The Getting Inside me Project about having a career plan by Lady E has helped me to see that for me to be a good journalist I must always do thorough research, associate more with my colleagues and learn to accept all kinds of beats and cover them. Now I know how cases in court are to be reported and the requirements and consequences of being a surety for someone as a guarantor.”



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     Training members of the Nigeria Association of Women Journalists (NAWOJ) and Nigeria Union of Journalists


On Friday 14th November 2018, special training for female reporters of NAWOJ on:
Media Entrepreneurship Opportunities for Female Reporters – A Career Plan. Journalist were introduced to the many areas of start-up journalism and use of innovation as an effective tool and means for impactful.



During the Question and Answer session, it was observed that reporting ‘activities’ of government’s social programmes was considered the equivalent of detailed journalistic report. In addition it was observed too that many beats were under-reported or not covered by journalists in Delta State. They include:

  • Defence
  • Oil and Gas
  • Agriculture
  • Business, etc.


GIME project in 2019 aims to collate all beats covered by journalists in Delta State to determine areas of over representation, under-representation, under-reporting including those beats left unassigned to address some of these needs. Another important module to be added to this training is data journalism, storytelling and fact checking. Many of the attendees were hearing of these terms for the first time. Added to this modules are workshop on Gender Reporting and Work Life Balance Effectiveness.

Future collaboration to bridge this gap will be done with WSCIJ, Africa Check, Media Career Services and Code for Africa to run these trainings.


TESTIMONIALS:

SHULAMITE OWHOEKEVBO (Ministry of Information): “I especially enjoyed the training, particularly in the area of how we tell and present our stories in such a way that people can impact on the lives of people and not just write a report just for the sake of writing one. As an information officer, I’ve learnt about writing balance report about women and children and not just men alone in the society.”

AUSTIN AZOR (NUJ): “It was a well-planned and well-delivered workshop by the trainer, Lady Ejiro Umukoro who deemed it fit to come train our female journalists on the need for media entrepreneurship. Many of us in the Nigeria media space have this thinking that we cannot diversify but the training has helped us to see how we can diversify our ideas and the money-making opportunities that exists in the profession.  There was a lot to learn in terms of report, content development and be known for what one does. This has been a great opportunity for me and I’m glad I didn’t miss it and will put my training into good use.”

Stella N. Macaulay (Directorate of Orientation): “A new vista has just been opened to me.”
EUNICE EMEYAZIA (Delta Broadcasting Service): “I have learnt how to raise the bar higher in my profession. As a journalist we’re responsible for educating members of the public. So if we don’t know the report or stories we cover well enough, how do we educate the people? If we’re misinformed, we equally misinform our audiences. I also leant about 5 Specific areas on how a female journalist can utilize beats to make some cash (lol)…”

RITA AKPOTU (Ministry of Information): “I learnt a lot about knowing other opportunities that exists for journalists to pursue their career.”

EFENURE OGENERO (The Urhobo Voice Newspaper): “Great value. But I need the resource person to mentor me so I can do well as a journalist.”

OBUNSELI PATIENCE: (NAPRO): “Equipping female journalists with tools to work to maximum capacity.”



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     GETTING INSIDE PROJECT: Civic Intelligence Keynote Lecture and Workshop


A Civic Intelligence Training Workshop targeted at Youth on spotting disinformation, youth thuggery, political violence, issues on voters rights and amplifying stories using Civic Intelligence Value Chain and Road map to do so through intentional critical thinking with members of Young African Leadership Network, YALI.

Friday 8th, December 2018. Members of Yali, NYSC, students, young professionals, youth out of job, and Electoral officers were beneficiaries of the training on: Civic Intelligence, The Missing Link to Nigeria’s Democratic Future. The training workshop was tied in with the formal launching of YALI NaijaVotes: Make It Count; a nationwide campaign based on 5 key areas:

a.            Boost voter participation
b.            Promote voting with integrity
c.             Encourage truth and accuracy in information-sharing
d.            Speak out against hate speech
e.            Inspire communities to reject violence



The training helped those in attendance understand what Civic Intelligence is, the roadmap, and value chain of Civic Intelligence. Using real life examples, participants using real life examples, Q&A, and peer interaction, participants got ownership of the term, inspiring them to become change agents. The significance of the power of information literacy in managing ‘fake news’ and abuse such as weaponisation of information, disinformation, helped participants identify the dangers of illiteracy and alliteracy and how it affects, promotes and limits electorates and citizens.

Practical session of the training empowered members to tap into their problem solving skills using context, data, demographic targets, etc., in solving social issues.


The goal of the workshop was to equip attendees with the mindset, skillset and brainstorming approach to be intentional and critical thinkers who deliberately provide solutions to many of the social problems in Nigeria that has to do with our collective thinking and psyche covering issues on rape of young children (Ochanya), domestic abuse, election violence, political thuggery, voters rights, respect for rule of law, the need to follow-up and aggressively amplify stories that otherwise would not have been heard, and proffering solutions to these using Civic Intelligence Value Chain and Roadmap while consistently measuring impact to ensure suggested approaches work: https://youtu.be/nWzLYMaHGOc.    
   
Over 50 youth ages 21-36 years, including adolescents (14-15 years) from across secondary schools,  members of the Young African Leadership Initiative (YALI), NYSC members, young professionals and electoral officers in Delta state and from other parts of Nigeria were in attendance.



Video coverage of the event was published on YouTube: https://youtu.be/nWzLYMaHGOc and www.emerald.ng titled: Civic Intelligence:  The Missing Link in Nigeria’s Socio-Political Success.

TESTIMONIALS:

EDITH ENEMUWE (Yali Member): “I am most thrilled by the fact that Civic Intelligence acts like a tap on one’s shoulder to get up and “DO” rather than just sit and be a passive observer. It is like taking a sneak peek into a vista of possibilities simply opening one’s mind and defining one’s roles in the society within the aspects of civic intelligence according to one’s capacities. The most interesting thing is that Civic Intelligence doesn’t require that one develop or grow an entirely new set of skills or capacities, rather it taps on the intelligence one is already gifted with and hones it for better use.”

ARINZE O. AUGUSTINE (Electoral Officer, INEC): “What struck me most on how Civic Intelligence works is the fact that it is a result-solution oriented principle that caught me.”

Obimma Uchechukwu (Corp Member): “Your delivery on Civic Intelligence is unlike anything I have ever seen before. I wish to invite you to speak in some of the events I organise in schools.”

Austin Okorodudu (Yali Coordinator, Delta):  “Today was not just fulfilling, it was, to say the least, awesome!”



Sunday, April 21, 2019


LightRay Reviews



Book in Focus: Daughters Who Walk This Path


Ejiro Umukoro in this audio book review, heightens your desire to want to read Yejide Kilanko's novel, Daughters Who Walk This Path, through dramatisation: https://youtu.be/vcD3ZLTYyaE.

A look at the fictional novel, Daughters Who Walk This Path, written by Yejide Kilanko, published by Farafina imprint for the Nigeria audience grabs you first with the book cover. The title, printed in black and aquamarine green with a distinctive imprint of footsteps in shades of red, brown and faded green against a background of other patches pulls you in. The more you look at the footprints, it's interesting how you keep seeing them as a metaphor of untold stories, hidden stories. Shameful stories.

Daughters Who Walk This Path, is a naked and unpretentious book. It does not aim to lift you with rich prose, a complicated plot or extensive use of literary devices. It is simply a narration that captures Nigeria’s historical references, timelines, mannerisms, metaphors, philosophical thrusts, and language of the Yorubas that delve succinctly and expertly using just the right amount of information to evoke memories of periods in Nigeria we all relate to differently. And in other instances it provokes the kind of nostalgia that lights a fire from the past you may wish to revisit, or not. 

Yejide knows her city of seven hills, Ibadan, the place where the heart of the story is located. Bringing the largest city by territory in West Africa to life, she captures the politics of the people in the 90s, which strikes you in the face like a wrecking ball seeing the ghastly resemblance of it to how the 2019 elections in Nigeria went. You hear Mr. Tiamiyu, a political candidate without the clout of big money bags, make a plea to convince electorates to vote for him. 

Her main character, Morayo through whose eyes we unfold both the magic of her innocence and  destruction of it, uses simple everyday language that captures everyday people living everyday life. Her voice does not reek of the middle class ‘poshness’ that seems to dominate stories written by Nigerian writers who win international book competitions or bestsellers as she tells the story of rape, its effect and consequences. The type of rape between a cousin and a family friend that does not have a categorisation like incest. 

Yejide sheds the untold stories of her characters with a deliberate stroke of her writing brush as she navigates the birth of an innocent child, Morayo’s sister, Eniayo who was born with a skin ‘anomaly’ called albinism. In Yoruba language they are referred to as Afin. She deftly tackles the issue of discrimination, shaming, bullying, cultural rejection and negative perception meted out to albinos in societies that prefer to normalise only colours they are used to. 

In narrating Morayo’s evolution from childhood to adulthood, Yejide encapsulate questions ladies who are not yet married at 25 face from society, exploring how the choice of living within the university campus or schooling from home can have both intended and unintended consequences. Thus raising the question: how do some get so lucky and others don’t. 

The scene at the market place on page pg 185-189 is very gripping. It captures the moment when Morayo’s aunt, Aunty Morenike came face-to-face with a violent police officer rounding of innocent passers-by on false charges brings to mind how SARs as we know them today may have metamorphosed from such police men with such mentality who raid markets, shops and even on the streets carting away pedestrians they label loiters in order to rob them by force using the tools of policing to achieve such brigandage. 

When Morayo hits her 30th birthday, the thorny issue of ethnic inter-marriage raised its ugly head. Morayo’s father years ago had called his daughters aside warning them not to marry outside a given ethnic group. While she was still in her teens, using a map of Nigeria, he circled off ‘accepted areas to marry from’ that was suitable for his daughters to choose from. Anything outside that was forbidden. But as you read the story further, it becomes clear that at the heart of such divisive thinking is the fear of falling into wrong hands by marrying into troublesome families as we eventually come to discover. 

As an ode to Morenike, a victim of rape and a brave fighter of cancer, who didn’t live to see her son’s child, or niece’s wedding or graduation, Yejide uses a letter Morenike writes to Morayo as the kind of gift a rape survivor can derive great inspiration from, the exact gift Morayo needed to push her on.

In closing off the end of each character’s story including that of the rapist, the question of redemption for evil done on others by the perpetrators slaps us hard in the face. Does the rapist deserve redemption? What kind of compensation would sooth, replace or ease what was lost or the effects of the acts committed by a rapist on its victims? Can it ever be enough?
Post your comment and let the conversation begin.

To order copies of the book and to join our book club, call 08035926901 or email lelcdelta@gmail.com.

Book Reviewer: Lady E. Umukoro