Monday, December 18, 2006

GJA Urges PR Officers To Expose Imposters

By Stephen Kwabena Effah
Monday, 18 December 2006 (Page 4)


THE Ghana Journalists Association (GJA) has appealed to the Institute of Public Relations (IPR) Ghana, to help it flush out imposters who have invaded the journalism profession and are engaging in extortions.

The President of the GJA Ransford Tetteh, who made the appeal, said that the situation was causing a lot of embarrassment to the GJA and it was about time "we bring sanity into the journalism profession."

He urged public relations practitioners to check the identity cards of people who parade themselves at events as journalists.

Mr. Tetteh was speaking at the 5th investiture and admission of new members into the IPR Ghana in Accra last Friday. In all, 35 new practitioners were admitted into the IPR, 27 of whom were associate members and eight accredited members.

"We need to sanitise the system so that the profession can continue to play its role in the democratic dispensation and be respected by members of society," Mr. Tetteh said, adding that journalists who are not members of the GJA could still practise their profession provided they conducted themselves professionally.

Mr. Tetteh said event organisers were sometimes to blame for the activities of imposters explaining that in their desire to get their evens publicised, they accepted anyone who came to events claiming to be journalists.

Mr. Tetteh also advised accredited journalists to be bold and point out any imposter they meet at programmes to the organisers saying, "you know your colleagues so you should be bold to tell the people parading as journalists that they are not."

He said the GJA will organise more workshops and seminars for its members under continuing educatin programme to promote standards.

"If we do that we may avoid some of the landmines that face us everyday that we are dragged to court, the national Media Commission or the GJA Ethics and Disciplinary council," he said.

Speaking to the Times, the president of the IPR Ghana, Kojo Yankah, said the institute has agreed with the GJA to hold periodic meetings to dialogue on the issue of imposters and how to address it.

He said earlier moves to weed out charlatans from the profession failed, because the mechanism for monitoring was weak, adding that there was the need to strengthen the monitoring mechanism "so that we will be alert all the time."

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