During the ongoing journalist training in Warri, participants were urged to emphasize unifying elements in their reporting to promote peace amidst conflict. This directive was underscored in "The Common Ground Journalism Training," organized by Search For Common Ground as part of their project, "A Community-Centered Approach To Transforming Criminality and Violence in the Niger Delta." Supported by the European Union and implemented alongside consortium partners such as Stakeholders Democracy Network, PIND Foundation, and Academic Associates PeaceWorks, the project spans 66 communities across 33 local government areas in Bayelsa, Delta, and Rivers States. The training, currently taking place in Warri, Delta State, has drawn over 30 journalists and communication experts and is scheduled to last for 5 days (18th to the 22nd of March 2024). Representing the Country Director of SEARCH, Yacinthe Agbagadjan, Head of Office of SEARCH and Head of Programme Implementation i
The need for journalists to examine issues impartially and cover such issues with inclusivity, reflecting on diverse perspectives which will in turn contribute to peace-building and social change was highlighted at a five-day intensive training on Common Ground Journalism for Journalists from Bayelsa, Rivers and Delta States, with the theme ‘A Community Centered Approach to Transforming Criminality and Violence in the Niger Delta” held in Warri, Delta state. In his opening remarks, Search for Common Ground Head of Office/Programme Implementation in the Niger Delta, Mr. Yacinthe Agbagadjan informed that the training was organized in partnership with Stakeholders Democracy Network, Partnership Initiatives in Niger Delta, and Academic Associates Peace Works, funded by the European Union as part of an 18 month project covering sixty-six communities across thirty-three Local Governments Areas of the three states. Agbadjagan said there was need for media practitioners to contribute to peace-
A 34-year-old architect, Abiodun Akinpelu, who allegedly defiled his five-year-old niece, on Wednesday appeared before an Ikeja Chief Magistrates’ Court in Lagos. Akinpelu, who resides at No. 29, Mayowa St., Orelope in Egbeda, a Lagos suburb, is facing a two-count charge of defilement and indecent assault. The offence, according to the Prosecutor, Insp. Clifford Ogu, was committed on Sept. 4 at the apartment of the accused. The accused indecently assaulted her by fingering her, Ogu told the court. “He lured the girl into his room, carried her on his laps and started fingering her. “The grandmother, while bathing the girl, discovered that she cries as she washes her private part. “The girl narrated everything that the uncle did to her to her grandmother,” he told the court. The prosecutor said the accused was arrested and handed over to the police. The offences contravened Sections 1375 and 137 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015. The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) re
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