This research delved into the analysis of coverage of child defilement cases in various Nigerian newspapers. The objective was to examine the reporting patterns of such incidents in the media. Employing content analysis as the research methodology, the study focused on three national newspapers (The Nigerian Tribune, The Punch, and The Vanguard) and three local newspapers (Osun Defender, PM News, and Hope Newspaper) published in 2024. A total of 714 editions and 102 news items across all six newspapers were analyzed, with four editions randomly selected from each newspaper (February, April, July, and November). The findings regarding victims' identity indicated that none of the 102 sampled stories disclosed the victims' identities. Frequency analysis revealed that The Punch Newspaper had the highest frequency with 25 stories, followed by The Nigerian Tribune Newspaper with 21 stories, and The Vanguard Newspaper with 19 stories. In contrast, Osun Defender had the lowest frequency, with only 9 stories. Regarding the depth of the stories, majority were reported in less than half a page (64.7%), followed by 20.6% of reports on half a page, and 7.8% and 6.9% of stories each on above half a page and a full page, respectively. Analysis of the slant of reportage showed that 59.8% of stories portrayed child defilement as blameworthy, 6.9% depicted it as not entirely blameworthy, and 33.3% remained neutral on the blameworthiness of the perpetrators. In conclusion, the study emphasized the critical need to protect Nigerian children from defilement by adults, highlighting the importance of concerted efforts from all stakeholders, and the media. It recommended Nigerian newspapers continuous adherence to policies protecting identities of child defilement victims in order to shield them from stigmatization.
Okoji et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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