We are not perfect; do introspection about your method – Manasseh tells Anas
Editor of the Fourth Estate who is also an investigative journalist Manasseh Azure Awuni, has told his colleague undercover journalist Anas Ayemeyaw Anas to refine his methodology following the nature of the judgment that was delivered by the court in the case against Assin Central Member of Parliament Kennedy Agyapong.
Manasseh said journalists are not perfect who attract criticisms, sometimes maliciously and on other occasions constructively, hence he must do self-assessments in his approach over time.
The Accra High Court on Wednesday, March 15 dismissed the GH¢25 million defamation suit against Kennedy Ohene Agyapong brought by investigative journalist Anas Aremeyaw Anas.
The judge, Justice Eric Baah, held that Anas Aremeyaw Anas failed to prove that Ken Agyapong defamed him by airing the documentary – “Who watches the watchman” – but rather, the documentary exposed shady deals that Anas and his associates were involved in.
This was after Anas, in 2018, sued the New Patriotic Party (NPP) lawmaker for allegedly defaming him.
Anas prayed to the court to award GH¢25 million against Mr Agyapong to compensate him for the defamatory material published against him by the MP.
The court concluded that what Anas is engaged in is not investigative journalism but rather “investigative terrorism” and that Agyapong was justified to call Anas “a blackmailer, corrupt, an extortionist, and evil”.
“I find the claims by the plaintiff [Anas Aremeyaw Anas) meritless and they are hereby dismissed,” Justice Baah ruled.
But Anas said he disagreed with the judge both on law and on the facts of the case.
He accused Justice Baah of delving into the arena of criminal prosecution against him despite the matter being a civil case.
“My team and I and the lawyers have carefully studied the judgment delivered by the court and we are unanimous that the judge made an overreach and descended into the arena and made criminal pronouncements about me as If I was standing a criminal trial.
“He also justified the MP accusing me of the murder of JB Danquah, murder of 20 Chinese nationals. We are filing an appeal because there was no evidence provided,” Anas said in a video recording responding to the judgment.”
He added “…I disagreed with the judge’s ruling both on law and the facts. when I started this work 21 years ago, I never assumed that it would be an easy road yet it is the evidence in my work and the commitment to truth and justice that has always led and prevailed against all the forces that have worked to pull us down”
Speaking on this development on the Key Points on TV3 Saturday, March 18, Manasseh said “…the other thing [Anas] should do for me is to refine the trade because I will concede that we are not perfect, we have people who criticize us maliciously, sometimes constructively, and some for different other reasons.
“What that does is that, you look within yourself and then ask, is there something that I can do about the method? Is there something I can get about my practice? So I believe that the next generation of investigative journalists should begin to take, not only the judgment, but the issues that have been raised because the judgment, some of them I cannot speak to because I wasn’t part of those investigations Anas did, I had no idea who and who he met and what happened.
“For some of the issues and allegations, I think it will be inappropriate for me to want to speak to them.”
Source : 3news