By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D. Twitter: @farooqkperogi Many Nigerians, especially those on social media, have by now read about Dr. Olu...
By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.
Twitter: @farooqkperogi
Many Nigerians, especially those on social media, have by
now read about Dr. Oluyinka Olutoye, a Nigerian doctor in America who,
along with his partner surgeon Dr. Darrell Cass, caused a baby girl to be born
twice. A deadly tumor was first removed from the baby’s brain when she was just
16 weeks old in her mother’s womb, then she was put back in the womb, and was
delivered again after she became a full-term baby.
I examined the reporting of this medical feat in America’s
mainstream media and didn’t find references to Olutoye’s Nigerian nationality.
(He got his medical degree from Obafemi Awolowo University in 1988.) The
reporting on Olutoye recalled an article I wrote on July 16, 2011 titled, “Nigerian-Americans in America’s News Media.” Read below excerpts from the article:
Dr. Oluyinka Olutoye |
America’s mainline
news media deploy a really curious reportorial technique to narrativize
Nigerians: They amplify our national identity in negative, unflattering news
stories and suppress—sometimes even outright erase—it when stories cast us in a
positive light. Three events in the past few weeks instantiate this invidious
reportorial temperament.
First, on June 11, CNN and other American news media
excitedly went to town with the story of two American “Marines [who] showed
extraordinary bravery 'when the world became fire'.” It’s about two military
men who were honored with the American military’s second highest honor for
their uncommon valiance while on a mission in Afghanistan. The honor, called
the Navy Cross, is second in prestige only to the “Medal of Honor,” the highest
U.S. military decoration awarded for bravery and valor in action.
It turned out that one these two brave Americans is a man
named Capt. Ademola Fabayo. Although his name is noticeably Nigerian—or at
least “non-American”—CNN didn’t disclose his natal nationality until toward the
end of the story. Even so, his association with Nigeria was undermined with the
tidbit that he regards himself as more American than Nigerian. “Fabayo was born
in Nigeria,” CNN writes, “but considers himself a New Yorker.” Would CNN have
respected his preference to be considered more American than Nigerian if he
were a criminal?....
It is telling that all the American news media that reported
on this award mentioned the original nationality of the marines [the other one
is from Mexico] only in the last paragraphs of their stories. As media scholars
and practitioners know only too well, we live in an “age of skimming” where
people only read the first few paragraphs of a story and then jump to the next
story.
This seems like petty
griping until you contrast this with what happened to another Nigerian-American
exactly 19 days later. On June 30, the American news media overflowed with the
story of a “Nigerian man,” identified as Olajide Oluwaseun Noibi, who boarded a
flight from New York to Los Angeles with expired and stolen boarding passes.
The first sentence in The Associated Press’ reporting on the
story reads: “A Nigerian man boarded a Virgin Atlantic airplane last week with
an invalid boarding pass, according to the FBI.” For those who didn’t know, The
Associated Press is America’s (and the world’s) biggest news agency….
Many headlines—in online, print, and broadcast
media—identified Noibi as a “Nigerian man.” However, Noibi is actually an
American citizen born to parents who are originally from Nigeria. He was born in
the city of Ames in Iowa, a state in Midwestern United States. That means he
enjoys what is called birthright citizenship. The Fourteenth Amendment to the
US Constitution states that “All persons born or naturalized in the United
States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United
States and of the State wherein they reside.”…
So, Noibi, an
American by birth, was identified as a Nigerian on account of the nationality
of his parents, but Fabayo who was actually born and raised up in Nigeria was
identified merely as a brave (immigrant) American marine. His association with
Nigeria had to wait until the last paragraphs. Even then, he was described as
more American than Nigerian.
I find this contrast intriguing. But, most importantly, from
all indications, Noibi is clearly mentally disturbed. A Nigerian blogger has
chronicled Noibi’s awkward Facebook status updates and incoherent rants on
YouTube. He clearly cuts the picture of a brainsick loony, but the American
media haven’t even pursued this angle. The media were, instead, initially
interested in linking the man’s freaky behavior with Umar Farouk
AbdulMuttalab’s 2009 attempted “underwear bomb” plot. But the realization that
Noibi is a self-professed Christian evangelist destroyed this potentially
sensational media narrative.
Finally, on July 7,
another stunning story involving a Nigerian by the name of Ikenna Njoku, who
was unfairly racially profiled by a bank, came to the open. Njoku was arrested,sent to jail for four days, and had his car auctioned off when he went to cash
a check.
Njoku, a construction
worker, worked hard to buy a home. The American government has a program called
first-time home-buyer rebate, which gives back a large chunk of taxes to
anybody who buys a new home. Njoku qualified to receive $8,463.21 (about 1.3
million naira) and got a check worth that amount, which was issued by Chase
Bank, the very bank that caused him to be arrested!
When he went to cash the check, the cashier looked at his
foreign-sounding name. She didn’t believe a black man with a funny name could
own a home much less qualify for a home-buyer rebate worth that amount. Instead
of honoring his check, the cashier called the police on him. He was arrested
and jailed for days until the bank realized that he was genuine.
Meanwhile, he lost
his job, his car, and never received an apology from the bank. He will
certainly get millions of dollars in compensatory damages from the bank,
especially because the national media are sympathetic to his travails.
For some reason, however, the man has never been identified,
even for once, in the mainline U.S. media as a Nigerian. He is simply called
“an Auburn man.” (Auburn is a city in the northwestern U.S. state of
Washington).
Why is he not identified as a Nigerian? Is it because he
cuts the image of a hardworking, honest immigrant who is the victim of an
odious racial profiling, an image that doesn’t sit well with the media
stereotypes of Nigerians? Had he been found guilty of check fraud, would the
headlines still have referred to him merely as an “Auburn man”? I bet he would
have been called a “Nigerian man” at best and a “Nigerian scammer” at worst.
And he would have been linked with 419 scams.
The truth, in the
final analysis, is that every media formation is guilty of cultivating a set of
narratives and imageries that it then tries hard to nurture and defend at all
costs. The Nigerian media has its own peculiar sets of ethical infractions. But
as a Nigerian living in America, I can’t help being miffed by the hypocritical
portrayal of Nigerians in the American media.
Nigerian-Americans in America's News Media
Nigerian-Americans in America's News Media
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