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General News of Wednesday, 16 October 2019

    

Source: classfmonline.com

Stop filing 'disheartening' stories about Ghana – Botchwey to journalists

Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration

The Minister of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration, Ms Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey, has challenged the leadership of the Ghana Journalists Association (GJA) to sensitise media practitioners across the country to be accurate in their reportage

Ms Botchwey said this when the leadership of the GJA, as part of activities leading to its 70th-anniversary celebration, paid a courtesy call on her on Wednesday, 16 October 2019.

"The media have a role to play to ensure that we are all made aware of what we have. Sometimes, as I said, you read some reports and it’s disheartening, especially when you have, in some cases, taken pains to walk people through a certain process to where you are and then the reports come and it's totally different. A small part [of all you said] is taken and that's what is highlighted and sometimes it’s not the best," she stated.

The minister also congratulated the GJA for their 70th-anniversary adding that there is no justification for to be attacked in their line of duty.

For his part, GJA President Roland Affail Monney commended the minister for her role in uplifting Ghana's image and expressed the need to give more education to journalists to have the national interest at heart when reporting for international media.

"Our elders teach us that it is wrong, culturally, it is even demeaning to point to your family house with your left hand, and some journalists, either out of mischief or whatever, will do stories which denigrate our image as a country.

I know some of these stories are rooted in ignorance and others in mischief. But in all these, we need education on the implications of the stories we do but before the education or training programmes come, we have a duty, as professionals, indeed, every journalist worth his or her salt ought to weigh the implications, think through the consequences of whatever story we do relative to the national interest," he noted.