Shettima Proposes Endowment Fund for Fallen Editors’ Families
Borno State Governor, Kashim Shettima, has made a
strong appeal to the Nigerian Guild of Editors, NGE, to set up an
endowment fund to provide financial and other support to families
of deceased editors with a take-off of ten million naira which the
Governor announced as donation for the fund.
Shettima made the appeal at when he
had an interactive session with editors of newspapers and senior
broadcast journalists in Lagos.
The Governor’s suggestion to the editors was
based on a story he took time to narrate regarding his experience
with the family of a late editor, whom he said, happened to be his
friend years before he (Shettima) assumed the office of Governor in
- Shettima begged to conceal the identity of the deceased
editor while making his narration, a step the Governor explained,
was meant to respect the memory of the dead.
“Before I go into this interactive session,
there is something that has been troubling my mind for a very long
time, I don’t know if this is the right moment to say my mind
but I crave your indulgence to tolerate me so i pour out my
mind. I had a friend that died years ago, he was an editor of
a Newspaper in this country, sorry, I want to conceal the identity
of that person, I won’t tell you the number of years or give
you clear clues, you editors are extremely smart with analytical
minds, you can guess the person if I give too much clue and I want
to respect the memory of that friend of mine. Like I said, that my
friend was an editor of a Newspaper in one part of this country. We
were close while I was in banking sector. He worked with
extraordinary devotion to duties, he was always passionate about
work, he took his Newspaper like an only child, very protective and
very competitive and promotional before he retired and died. In one
of my visits to his family some years ago while I was a
commissioner before I became a Governor, I was shocked to see that
some of his children had dropped out of school because his widowed
wife couldn’t afford the private secondary schools the children
were attending, she had to sacrifice the future of two of the kids
for their elders, so the younger ones had to drop out of school for
the two seniors to remain in school. That friend of mine was the
bread winner of his extended family, he lived in a
rented house somewhere in Nigeria. His Newspaper
paid his entitlements as it should, but we all know that such
couldn’t have gone anywhere given what we all know about the
salary structure of the Nigerian Media Industry and even the civil
service generally except for some Government corporate
establishments. So, I became very disturbed when I learnt that my
friend’s children were out of school, funny enough, I was a
commissioner for education, so we adopted the education of the
children, paying the fees. As God would have it, the eldest of the
children passed WAEC with seven distinctions including Mathematics
and English, so I reached out to a commissioner of education in one
State because the young man wasn’t from Borno and luckily, the
then commissioner of education in that State was a very good man
and we were close too, he assisted and that my friend’s son was
secured University, graduated and completed his youths service last
year and we have gotten him a job in the bank where I know best as
a former banker” he noted.
Explaining the basis of his narrative to the
editors, Governor Shettima said, “now, the reason I gave this
story which I had never told anyone before now is to offer a
suggestion to the Nigerian Guild of Editors and thank God, my very
good brother and friend, President Femi Adesina will get my
suggestion and all of you make up the Guild. You see, the editor is
an unsung hero, he is the masquerade, he is the fixer, the panel
beater of whatever the reporter files yet the reporter gets all the
credit and the editor bears the risk if the reporter happens to get
his or her facts wrong. Some editors are known only when they pen
columns but most often, the reporters are those known, hence they
are with the most goodwill. If you mention The Nation Newspapers
for instance, one of the names that will easily come to my mind is
Yusuf Ali because he is a prolific reporter of my area of News
interest, the north, since interest in news is sometimes about
proximity, what concerns the reader most. My friend Omotosho is the
man behind Yusuf Ali’s popularity. My sister Ijeoma who is
about the only woman that edits a top flight Newspaper in Nigeria
is the lady behind many popular reporters in THISDAY and the same
applies to all of you here in your respective media houses whether
print or broadcast. You build the reporters, bring them to
limelight but you get the lesser goodwill and that is a natural
thing because people read the reporters or watch them on TV so they
get more goodwill, this is why most times, those appointed by
Governors to take charge of media management are those who report
and then out your magnanimity, you editors also support your
reporters and help them succeed as media managers. So, I have a lot
of respect for you. So, I have a suggestion that you come up
welfare programme for editors who pass on. Nobody wants to die, we
all don’t but the fact is that, death is a sad change of event
that is a permanent in our existence as mortals. My advice is that
you come up with something you might call FALLEN GATE-KEEPERS
ENDOWMENT FUND or FALLEN EDITORS ENDOWMENT FUND which you can
launch to attract support and possibly invest whatever is raised
through a group of Trustees so that such funds can be used to
support families of editors who pass on, to ensure their children
feed, continue their education, get jobs after school, help in
managing issues that might affect their welfare and all that so
that we support the families of whoever is gone amongst us” he
noted.
Adding, he said “we have lost Dimba Igwe. The
late Suleiman Bisalla of New Telegraph had interviewed me twice
when I was a commissioner before he was killed this year when a
suicide bomber attacked a plaza in Abuja. I had met the managing
editor of Daily Trust, Suleiman Mohammed on board a flight from
Abuja to Lagos about ten years ago when he was associate editor for
south, then he was based here in Lagos and I was on my way to
University of Ibadan where I had done a Masters Degree, I was
returning there with considerations of starting a PHD before events
overtook my plan. So, we have to always remember those we worked
with and reach out to their families to support their families
while they are gone. We owe our fallen friends an obligation of
supporting their bereaved families. Sometimes, the support may not
even be about money, it might be moral, it might be about guidance
or even a fight where the families of our fallen editors are being
chanced or lacking access to certain rights and privileges whether
on admission to schools, access to deserved scholarship at so many
things. As per my suggestion of you establishing FALLEN
GATE-KEEPERS OR FALLEN EDITORS ENDOWMENT FUND or whatever name you
may choose, we will make a token donation of ten million naira
(N10m) for take-off of that fund. I am very passionate about
it,” the Governor said.