WANTED: Informed narratives on labour migration
Kofi Yeboah Writes,
The warrant for my seizure at the
airport was a mandatory requirement of an e-landing card, with scores of
passengers applying for it from the Nigeria Immigration website powered by very
weak Internet connectivity.
For about three hours, I could not make
any headway online at the Immigration website and inland from the airport, an
experience that deported my anxiety of seeing Abuja.
After resolving that challenge through
the intervention of a lady requested to assist passengers apply for the
e-landing card, and a few metres away from that section, Anthony, a calm and
friendly Immigration Officer who stamped my passport, connected me to hope.
The two encounters with the e-landing
card and Officer Anthony presented me with two worlds of migration in Africa,
full of uncertainty and quite different from the smooth flight Africa World
Airlines offered me.
That stark reality would later play out
vividly at Chelsea Hotel, Abuja, where leaders of journalists unions and
associations in West Africa met for two days on the topic: ‘Adapting ILO’s Media Toolkit on Forced Labour and Fair Recruitment for
ECOWAS Region’.
The ILO Media Toolkit on Forced Labour
and Fair Recruitment for ECOWAS Region provides a remedy in that respect by
empowering the media to address that need.
The media toolkit, drafted by the
International Labour Organisation (ILO), is in five modules to guide
journalists on labour migration reporting.
The modules detail the critical issues
surrounding forced labour and fair recruitment; information gathering methods,
and storytelling styles and skills.
Indeed, the media toolkit offers a
veritable manual for journalists, journalism trainers and students, clearly setting
out the content and context required to address labour migration in an
informative, educative and impactful manner.
With the incorporation of some
recommended amendments, the publication of the ILO Media Toolkit on Forced
Labour and Fair Recruitment in ECOWAS Region will be extremely useful in the
quest to address such terrible ills of labour migration.
Purpose of workshop
The two-day regional validation workshop was organised by the ILO Regional Office in West Africa, in collaboration with partners like the Federation of African Journalists (FAJ), with the view to exposing the participants to the ILO draft media toolkit.
The intervention by the ILO is founded
on the belief that the media plays a “powerful and profound” role in shaping
public understanding of migration, recruitment and labour exploitation.
“Your words can amplify the voices of
those too often unheard and can shine a light into the darkest corners of the
labour market,” says Dr Venessa Phala, Country Director of the ILO Office for
Ghana, Liberia, Nigeria and Sierra Leone.
Speaking through a representative, the
ILO Country Director notes that forced labour and unfair recruitment practices
do not only violate fundamental labour and human rights; “they strip people of
their dignity, protection and opportunity for decent work”.
“Yet, these abuses continue to persist,
often hidden in plain sight,” she adds.
According to Dr Phala, the ILO Media
Toolkit on Forced Labour and Fair Recruitment for ECOWAS Region provides a
practical resource to help the media uncover the realities of forced labour and
unfair recruitment with accuracy, sensitivity and impact.
The Federation of African Journalists is
driving the ILO agenda on forced labour and fair recruitment reporting because
it believes labour migration is a subject of public interest journalism.
“These are stories that matter to
communities, families and the future of our continent. They are about people
leaving their homes not out of choice, but out of necessity,” FAJ President, Omar
Faruk Osman, points out.
Having established the imperatives for
labour migration reporting, the FAJ President charges his fraternity: “We want
to see African journalists at the heart of this narrative. It is time we shaped
Africa’s labour migration story from our own perspectives so that our
experiences are not misrepresented or misunderstood”.
Another major partners of ILO – the
Ghanaian European Centre for Jobs Migration, a project under the German
development agency, GIZ – is excited about contributing to shaping narratives
for regular migration.
Dr Lilian Amankwa Fobi Ashia, Technical
Advisor at the Centre, says her organisation is “committed to ensuring regular,
orderly and safe migration, and believes in providing accurate information for
potential migrants to make informed decision about migration in a regular
form”.
As a journalist, journalism trainer and human
rights activist, the ILO initiative will greatly help journalists better inform
people to navigate the challenges of labour migration, just as the availability
of information helped me to secure e-exit card before arriving at Nnamdi
Azikiwe International Airport for a smooth check-in and flight back to Accra.
END
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Writer's Email: kofiyebo@yahoo.com
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