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Nosa Igiebor (journalist) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Nosa Igiebor (journalist)
Nosa Igiebor (born 25 December 1952) is a Nigerian journalist and editor. In 1993, he won the International Press Freedom Award of the Committee to Protect Journalists for his magazine ''Tell'' coverage of Sani Abacha's military rule. ==Early career== After graduating with distinction from the Ghana Institute of Journalism, Igiebor began his career at the Nigerian Television Authority in Edo State, where his last position was as senior news editor. His next employer was the National Concord Group, where he was news editor. He left there to become deputy editor-in-chief for the Nigerian news magazine ''Newswatch''. In 1991, Igiebor co-founded the independent news magazine ''Tell'' and became its editor-in-chief.〔 Like Igiebor, most of ''Tells journalists came to the magazine from ''Newswatch'', after its editor Dele Giwa was killed by a letter bomb and its editorial policies became consequently less daring. ''Tell'' published articles critical of the government and military, causing the magazine's relationship with military ruler Ibrahim Babangida to become increasingly strained. In April 1993, when the magazine featured an interview with retired General Olusegun Obasanjo as its cover story, the government confiscated 50,000 copies of ''Tell'' and the staff was forced to go into hiding. They continued to publish as a tabloid, however, becoming "the first of Nigeria’s Guerrilla tabloids of contemporary times".〔
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