
Audio By Carbonatix
The founder of the Centre for Media Analysis, an independent media research institution, says journalists in the country should be encouraged to ask strong and pointed questions.
While praising some journalists for the quality of their questions to President John Mahama at his first anniversary media encounter, Dr. Messan Mawugbe said the journalists ought to have backed their questions with statistics.
Speaking on the Super Morning Show Wednesday, Dr. Mawugbe charged journalists to do thorough research on national issues in order to be able to ask strong questions.
He was reviewing the performance of journalists at President Mahama’s first official meeting with the press at the Flagstaff House.
As part of activities marking his one year in office, President Mahama met a cross section of the media yesterday at the Flag Staff House.
Journalists took the opportunity to question the President on his performance over the past year.
Questions asked bordered on a wide range of issues including corruption, education, the media development fund, energy, fire outbreaks among others.
While the event was hailed, some critics say some of the questions were basic and empty.
The Head of the Political Science Department of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Dr. Richard Amoako Baah said the inability of the journalists to ask follow-up questions deducted from the event.
He said the situation allowed the president to offer half-baked answers and got away with it.
For him, many of the questions could have been better framed and would have elicited better responses from the president.
Dr. Mawugbe of the Centre for Media Analysis Mawugbe agreed.
“Journalists couldn’t back their questions with statistics…statistical data to entrench their questioning were lacking,” he stressed.
Government says it is considering making the event a quarterly one to enable journalists interact more with the president.
Journalists may therefore have a better opportunity to ask statistics-backed questions at the next meeting with the president.
Latest Stories
-
What Is Wrong with Us: We keep waiting for governments to deliver prosperity while ignoring the citizens who sustain it
2 minutes -
Your Retention Problem Isn’t About Pay – It’s About Progress
15 minutes -
Adu-Boahene trial: No cyber defence system delivered despite ¢49.1m spent – EOCO investigator tells court
17 minutes -
Boy, 3, no longer critical after crocodile attack
21 minutes -
First round of US-Iran talks ends with encouraging progress, mediators say
25 minutes -
Three dead in Philippines high school shooting over bullying ‘grudge’
39 minutes -
Antoine Semenyo has no England regrets ahead of World Cup showdown: “I could never say no to Ghana”
41 minutes -
NDC names national headquarters after Jerry John Rawlings on 79th birthday
45 minutes -
Over 1,000 patients diagnosed in Ghana Eye Project’s free screening at Oyibi
49 minutes -
GIPC woos Canadian investors for value addition in key industrial sectors
1 hour -
Up to 90% of children with sickle cell risk early death without timely care — Dr Bankas warns
2 hours -
Haruna Iddrisu empowers GES to clamp down on post-WASSCE celebrations in schools
2 hours -
NACOC arrests three in Volta Region cannabis production and storage raid
2 hours -
PAC Vice Chair raises alarm over stalled corruption prosecutions, calls for stronger enforcement
2 hours -
Compassion International graduates urged to avoid deviant behaviour as they transition to independent life
2 hours