MRA, IMS Urge Nigerians to Use Radio as Tool for Building Peace
Two frontline media advocacy groups, Media Rights Agenda (MRA) and the Institute for Media Studies (IMS) have called on Nigerians to use radio as a tool for building peace across political, economic,...
Two frontline media advocacy groups, Media Rights Agenda (MRA) and the Institute for Media Studies (IMS) have called on Nigerians to use radio as a tool for building peace across political, economic, religious and ethnic divides particularly at this period when Nigeria is holding general elections to elect a new set of leaders.
MRA made the call in a statement issued in Lagos by Mr. Ayode Longe, MRA’s Programme Director, to commemorate the eighth edition of the World Radio Day, a Day celebrated every year on February 13, and in line with the theme of the celebration: Dialogue, Tolerance and Peace.
World Radio Day was proclaimed at the 36th session of UNESCO’s General Conference in 2011 to take place on February 13 each year. It was then unanimously endorsed by the United Nations General Assembly on January 14, 2013 at its 67th session as a UN Day.
The Day commemorates the establishment of the UN R on February 13, 1946 and is now set aside as the day to celebrate radio as a medium to improve international cooperation between broadcasters and to encourage networks and community radio alike to promote access to information, freedom of expression and gender equality over the airwaves.
Mr Longe said “Radio has touched billions of lives around the world positively and made a lot of impact; and with the convergence of technology, this impact is expanding. The world needs to explore every avenue to strengthen radio and make it a tool for dialogue, tolerance and peace, in line with the theme for the 2019 celebration of the World Radio Day.”
Saying that the world, including Nigeria, has witnessed so many crises, he added “The world needs peace through tolerance and dialogue and radio being the cheapest and farthest reaching means of communication is so much suited to bring peace to the world and technological advancement has made radio portable and its signals accessible from remote areas using different gadgets and devices, including even the most basic mobile phones available today.”
Mr. Longe identified the importance of radio in many different ways and how it can be used to promote peace, noting that it is a medium that is being used to foster participation and engagement in local languages; it is the first medium people turn to for information and updates about just anything including during natural disasters, wars, as well as communal, national and political activities of all hues.
He said: “Radio is unarguably the widest reaching medium of communication in Nigeria, as it is in most other parts of the world. It has become cheap to acquire and maintain, very portable and is a highly ubiquitous means of receiving real time information, entertainment and education.”
Mr. Longe described this year’s theme as very appropriate, saying it is coming at about the time of Nigeria’s general elections which have frequently been characterized by violence in the past. He stressed that for free, fair and peaceful elections in Nigeria, there is need for tolerance from everybody, especially the political actors and their most ardent supporters, adding that dialogue will enhance understanding and tolerance which will ultimately bring about peace, and that the radio is best positioned to facilitate this.
He called on all Nigerians, particularly broadcasters, to use radio to douse tension and ensure peace, reminding them that radio has the potential to stoke violence and as well as to be an instrument for building peace.
In a statement signed by Dr Akin Akingbulu, its executive director, the Institute for Media and Society (IMS), says “Radio, being a prominent medium for information dissemination and tool for national development, plays a critical role in fostering dialogue, promoting peace and entrenching tolerance in communities.”
“Going by the theme of this year, it is important that managers promote freedom and diversity in newsrooms, while journalists provide professional coverage of issues to facilitate citizens’ participation in the conduct of a peaceful electoral process,” he says.
“We use this occasion to urge the regulatory authorities to licence more community radio stations in order to expand the frontiers of access to information by community people, and expand freedom of speech in the national population. While the recent approval of some more community radio outlets is appreciated, we are concerned that the rate of approval is far behind the expressed and genuine demands for licences by grassroots communities across the country.”
IMS) also calls on policy makers to provide a better legal environment for broadcasting through a review of the broadcasting law, the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) Act, to provide independence and secure funding for the agency. “This will strengthen the regulator to deliver better on its mandate,” it says.
“We also call on government at all levels, institutions, individuals and security agencies to protect and cooperate with broadcasters while carrying out their professional assignments during the electoral process,” Akingbulu quips


