Democracy Disruptors ought to be dealt with in direct and frontal attack – Anas Aremeyaw Anasreveals (VIDEO)
Anas talks on why he goes undercover in a 12 minutes video, (entire speech and video)
The much talked about undercover journalist, Anas Aremeyaw Anas talks about his practice in a 12 minutes video we have filed in this article.
In his speech, talked about his primary beginnings; where comes from, and the very situations which led him to becoming who he is today. He also recounted on why he didn’t do any other forms of journalist other than his current?
The speech of Anas Aremeyaw Anas had him talked about the rots he has unearthed so far and what aroused his interest to bringing out such findings
Read entire 12 minutes of Anas Aremeyaw Anas below
While growing up, I lived in small town called Bimbila in the Northen region of Ghana and I lent a lot. One fine morning, an incident happened; three notorious thieves were arrested and the community was very happy.
But in three days, these thieves have been released. And the reason given by the law enforcement agency was pretty simple and that was, there is no evidence.
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So as I grew and became a journalist, I even saw this on a wider scale because I realised that politicians always sought refuge as in always say there was no evidence whenever civil society begin to question them. With this thinking, I decided to have my own type of journalism and I look at three main things; I name, shame and jail.
When I say name, shame and jail, I mean that when I go undercover to get the hard core evidence, I team up with the law enforcement agency and at the end of the day testify in the court of law to make sure that the bad guys are put behind bars. The people who disrupt our democracy ought to be dealt with in direct and frontal attack. Not obliquely or half-heartedly
Click on the link to watch the remaining session of the 12 minutes speech by the undercover Journalist.
Source: Alhaji Adnam Wun Dabli – Facebook