…Celebrating Hakeem Bello, The Quintessential Journalist and Seasoned Spokesman At 50
Nine days to his 35th birthday and, remarkably, on the day Nigeria turned 40 as an independent nation (1 October 2000), Hakeem Bello was appointed editor of Nigeria’s Daily Times.
He had joined the Daily Times Group nine years earlier as a senior staff writer on the Sunday Times. He would later be drafted to start a special Saturday edition (Daily Times on Saturday) before being appointed editor of the daily. He was briefly executive editor of another newspaper, National Interest, before Babatunde Raji Fashola, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, in late 2006, contesting for the governorship of Lagos State, invited him to be the coordinator and adviser on media of his campaign organisation. A victorious Fashola in 2007 appointed Bello as his Senior Special Assistant on Media, and four years later, on winning a second term, his Special Adviser, still on Media.
On Saturday, 10 October 2015, Bello, a Fellow of the Nigerian Guild of Editors, will be 50 years old.
To celebrate, Bello wants to give back to journalism, a profession which he cherishes and hopes, with assistance from seasoned journalists, would return to the standards obtainable during his days at the Daily Times Group.
Nigerian journalists interviewing a state governor Photo: Ben Ezeamalu/Premium Times
Reporting that connects with the people
Believing that reporting is the soul of journalism, Bello is, through The Journalism Clinic, which vision is to raise the next generation of first-rate journalists in Nigeria — and ultimately in Africa — is sponsoring 50 journalists on a one-day Refresher Course on Reporting; to be facilitated by the Founder/Director of The Journalism Clinic, Taiwo Obe, with assistance from Pelu Awofeso, travel writer, blogger and a past winner of the CNN African Journalist of the Year award in the travel writing category, and Adetorera Idowu, who just completed the International Summer Convergence Course at the Thomson Foundation in London, United Kingdom.
“The purpose of journalism,” according to Bill Kovach and Tom Rosenstiel in The Elements of Journalism, “is to provide citizens with the information they need to make the best possible decisions about their lives, their communities, their societies, and their governments.”
This is the thrust of the workshop: how to report and connect with the people, especially in this digital age.