Member of pressure group,
Occupy Ghana, Sydney Casely-Hayford has advised students of the Ghana Institute
of Journalism to focus more on empowering themselves than on trivial things
such as fashion.
According to him, most of the
students at the University, a large number of whom are females, are more
concerned about what they wear than their training.
“Go to the Ghana Institute of
Journalism, GIJ, and look at the students who are coming out, majority of them
are females and when you look at it, you will see that it is more of a fashion
parade…so when we are talking about quality of journalism, they should tone
down on the fashion and get a little bit more serious with the actual content,”
he added.
Mr. Casely-Hayford made the
remark on Citi FM’s news analysis programme, The Big Issue on
Saturday on the back of President Nana Akufo-Addo’s encounter with the media.
The President met some
journalists in the country at the Flagstaff House where he was asked questions
on a number of topics spanning various sectors.
Ghanaians subsequently
lambasted some of the journalists accusing them of asking irrelevant questions
with a report by the Media Foundation for West Africa also questioning the
relevance of some of the questions that were asked.
‘Sexist, baseless’
Meanwhile, unhappy with the
remarks of Mr. Casely-Hayford, the Students’ Representative Council of GIJ
issued a statement chastising the Occupy Ghana member and demanded an apology
from him.
“Casely Hayford must apologize
and retract his statement against female students of the Ghana Institute of
Journalism. The SRC finds his statement to be very sexist, unfortunate,
unwarranted, unguided, without basis and an insult to the values of the Ghana
Institute of Journalism,” the statement added.
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