|
HOME
RECENT/ TOPICAL
*Power Probe: A Repeat of Old
Dramas
*NITEL: Saving Our Collective
Patrimony
*
Windfall: Excess Crude and Dollar Allocations
* RIBADU: The Battle of Spin
Doctors
* Warren Buffet: Humblest
Billionaire
*What of Al-Mustafha,
Bamaiyi & Others
*BPP: Another Anti-Corruption
Agency?
* Open Letter to Minister of
Information
* Economic Agenda:
Between Theory and Reality
* Riddles over
Reserve and Excess Crude Account
* Editors As Spokespersons
* Still on One Man Four
Wives
* President Yar'Adua: Our
Gain Our Fear
*NEITI: A Watchdog Over Oil
Sector
*Thosal Tribal Marks on Naira
*Elrufais in Mummy's Shop
* Population: Lagos Versus
Kano
* Abuja@ 30: Reality of a
Capital City
*Saddam Hanging & Arab
Culpability
* Pension: The Dilemma of
retirees
*Open Letter to Obasanjo and
Atiku
*Killings in the Name of the Devil
*EFCC: Corruption and Rest of Us
*Memo to El-Rufai on Housing
*Legislative Slap and Gender
*Memo
to Armed Robbers
*Igbo
Politics and Hollywood Movie
*Sharia:
Civilisation and Belief
YOUTHS/SOCIAL ISSUES
*Corper's Letter
*Youths
Speak out
*NYSC At 20
*After
NYSC What Next
*Taming
the Elders
*Success in Youth Service
*Islam
on Hair
*Suffering and Smiling Award
PR/MEDIA
*Imperative of PR
*Political PR
*News
Cartel
*PR
Dilemma
*PR
Analysis of Fani-Kayode
*OBJ-Atiku and Media
*Woman as Spokesperson
*Confab: Religion and Media
*Nigeria's Image
* Freedom of Information
* Between Propaganda and
PR
POLITICS/POLICY
*Bank
Lending
*Constitutional Contravention
*Economic Slavery
*Monetisation
*Revenue Formula
*Excess Oil Earning
*Letter to LGs
*Privatisation to Demolition
*Politics of Revenue Formula
*Reforming the Public Service
* Federation Account and the
Last Judgment
* Still Revenue Allocation Formula
* Theory of Privatizing
Education
* Kwara Politics
Without Lawal
*Shekarau: Speaking People's
Language
BOOK REVIEWS
*
Abacha Politicians Again
* A Nation Corrupted by Oil?
*Oh Me! Another Female Writer
from the North
|
|
Written
By Yushau A. Shuaib
THE SPOKESPERSON:
BETWEEN PROPAGANDA AND PUBLIC RELATIONS
Guardian
February 26, Thisday February 26, Triumph February 27, Leadership February 27,
Economic Confidential March, New Nigerian March
1, Sunday Trust March 4 and Sunday Champion March ? 2007
It is not about politics, product launch and cheap
publicity. It is about image, reputation and editorial judgement. It is a choice
between propaganda and public relations. Since information influences our
attitudes to life, the kinds of message we receive from organizations and
individuals to a large extent is of great concern to our livelihood.
Information comes in different forms. While
information that is not subjected to manipulation can be positive and negative
like electoral victory and earthquake or economic prosperity and financial
scandal, other news are processed and manipulated by concerned interests to draw
public attention. The result of some of the processed information may also be
encouraging or off-putting. In an effort to maintain objectivity and balance
stories, the press allows contenders and competitors in public and private
sectors to express themselves freely. This genuine generosity to utilize the
media platform is abused by charlatans who have little idea or lack experience
on the ethics of public affairs and the operation of the press. The media is
awash with individual egocentricity, personality clashes and commercialized
reportage. Yet as good as some of the subjects may be, the truth is not easily
decodable from the surface.
The desire to gain sympathy and acceptability of
the target audience, for the sole purpose of winning patronage and support, make
the roles of spokespersons, as intermediary, inevitable in any given
society and corporate organization. While most spokespersons are expected to
have undergone some training on ethics of mass communication or in the
alternative acquire some experiences in public affairs and media practice, what
we get from some of their activities are balderdash.
Cheap publicities that have lately and largely
invoked public discourse are handiworks of propagandists who defend the
indefensible acts through fabrication, intimidation and excessive exaggeration
to manipulate public opinion. Propaganda which many are not willing to associate
with even though rampant as the outputs of some spokespersons, is used to sell
bad products, hoodwink the consumer and pollute the air in most uncharitable and
wicked mien. It may not be necessary that one must acquire basic elementary
knowledge of mass communication, decency in choice of language and action for
the purpose of winning public support could have been better deployed to, at
least, give credibility and respect to the spokespersons and their principals.
On the other hand, public relations is the most
acceptable process of establishing and sustaining mutual and beneficial
relationship with the general public by abiding to the strict code of
professional practice. A PR practitioner gauges the public mood, conducts
research and responds appropriately to issues in the most dignified and matured
manner. A respected spokesperson, exemplified by trained public relations
practitioners, gives sincere advice, undertakes genuine reconciliation and
handles assignments professionally. He/she takes risk in defending his
principal, organization and their programme/products with pride, conscious of
the fact that there is tomorrow for men and women of honour.
The influence of propaganda in creating
newsworthiness on its principals and opponents has pushed to the background
development journalism that could have addressed our economic and industrial
needs. There is little the editors and other news gatekeepers can do to ensure
that what they receive is accurate, factual and authoritative information
because of the official designations of the sources, though they can easily
identify propagandists from public relations persons. It may also be of
importance to note that naked propaganda, sometimes as comic relief and
melodrama, sells the media because bad news is truly the news for readership
appeal and commercial purposes.
It was in realization of importance of monitoring
and regulating the practice and activities of masscommunicators that
professional bodies are established to update members and new entrants on the
rudiments, best practices and latest thinking in the field. The Nigerian
Institute of Public Relations (NIPR) and Nigerian Press Council (NPC) were also
established for that purpose. But unfortunately the NIPR, due to its internal
wrangling which was recently resolved, has failed to assert its power to
regulate, monitor and sanction quacks who give the profession a bad name. We
must be impressed by the activities of other professional bodies that have
effective internal mechanism to control influx of ill-qualified and inexperience
persons into their folds like the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA), Institute of
Chartered Accountant of Nigeria (ICAN), Nigeria Medical Association (NMA),
Association of Advertising Practitioners Council of Nigeria APCON and Nigerian
Guild of Editors. A credible professional body can reprimand chief executive
officers of private enterprises and even heads of governmental organisations who
flout the code of conducts of their respective offices. It happens in civilized
world to serve as a deterrent.
The failure of relevant bodies to checkmate
officers responsible for information dissemination is one of the great dilemmas
the nation faces today. Instead of engaging on issues of development and
beneficial to the society, what is churned out by expected spokespersons of
public and private institutions are abusive language, libelous statements,
threatening directives, intimidating harassment and childish expositions. It has
gone to a situation that those that were highly respected but who find
themselves as spokespersons, especially from the media and civil society, have
like chameleons changed overnight in defending the indefensible as they refuse
to advise their principals on the implications of their utterances and actions
that are detrimental to public good. Most of them seem to be scared stiff to
advise their bosses as they append their signatures on handouts in the name of
press statements without bothering to digest the contents. Probably due to the
survivalist instinct of chop-i-chop they shamelessly condone unethical, illegal
and in some cases unconstitutional demeanors just to be relevant not minding the
dent on their professional integrity and social responsibilty. Surprisingly such
officers after leaving the office disown their bosses of being dictatorial.
While propagandists can engage in anything just to
remain relevant, it is painful the constraints facing some genuine PR persons in
discharging their duties. The PR professionals deserve our sympathy as they are
mostly ignored or sacrificed for official exigency. The relevant professional
bodies too like Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR), Association of
Corporate Affairs Managers in Banks (ACAMB), Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) and
Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ) should ensure that their registered members
are protected as they operate within the tenets and code of their bodies.
Please read the rejoinders by clicking
|
|
TRIBUTES
*Zahradeen of BUK
*Prince is Gone
*Walin
Misau: Gone
not Forgotten
*Bola Ige: A
Northerner's Perception
*A Call for Academic governor
*A
Plane Crashes
*Haba
Governor Lawal
*OBJ, Buhari, Gani and Others
*Nzeribe for Senate President?
*Hamman
Tukur and Honours
*Jijiwa of Voice
of Nigeria
*In
Memory of Gen. Idiagbon
*Sesebo & Business Reporting
*Aliko Dangote of Nigeria
*Waziri and Plane Crash
*Gidado: An Incorruptible Minister
*Jimoh Ibrahim @40
GLOBAL
*In Defence of Saudi
*419 and the Rest of Us
*America: A Muslim Perception
*Miss World: Between the
Queen and Child
*A Trip to London
*FIFA: Faith and Fanaticism
*Obasanjo's Foreign
Trip
*A Visit to Mecca
*Letter to Muslims on US-Iraq War
*Foreign and Our
Legislators
*Saddam and Arab's Humiliation
REJOINDERS
*RE: Policing the Police
*Re: Councilors'
Pay
*Re: Oil Windfall Palaver
*Re: Gani's Ungentlemanly
*Re: Speak Again on NNPC
*Additional Rejoinders
OTHERS
*Letters to
Editor
*Fiction and Romance
*Poetry
FEEDBACK / REACTIONS
*Re: Defence of Saudia
*Re: Corper's Letter
*RE:
Taming the Elders
*RE: Oil Windfall Palaver
*RE: Igbo Politics and Movies
*Re: Igbo Politics
(Email)
*RE: In Memory of Idiagbon(Email)
*RE: Legislative Slap and Gender
*RE: Reforming Public Service
*RE:Confab, Religion and Media
*Re: Aliko Dangote of Nigeria
*Re: Memo to El-Fufai
*Re: EFCC, Corruption and Us
*RE: Killing in the Name of Devil
*RE:
An Incorruptible Minister
*RE: Privatising Education
*RE: Pension and Retirees
*RE: Kwara Politics Without Lawal
*RE: Abuja@ 30
*RE: Saddam Hanging and Arab
*RE: Population, Lagos Versus Kano
*Email Reactions to Author
INTERVIEWS
*Similarity between Literature and PR
*My Website Promotes
My Works
*Internet
Publishing -Great Business
REVIEWS OF HIS BOOKS
*Reviews on Novel
*Reviews on Financial PR
*Review on Media Tips
|