Veteran Journalist, Dr. Doyin Abiola Dies at 82

Prominent journalist, activist and wife of Chief MKO Abiola,  Dr. Doyin Abiola, is dead.

Dr. Abiola a former Managing Director of  Concord Newspapers died around 9pm on Tuesday after a brief illness, she was aged 82.

Late Doyin was the very first Editor of a major Nigerian newspaper, she braved the military onslaught against the media and at personal level, against her husband, the presumed winner of the June 12, 1993 presidential election, Chief MKO Abiola.

Doyin Abiola was educated at the University of Ibadan, Nigeria where she earned a degree in English and Drama in 1969.

After graduation, she started work with the Daily Sketch Newspaper. During this period, she started writing a column in the newspaper called ‘Tiro,’ which was addressing sundry issues of public concern, including gender matters.

In 1970, she left Daily Sketch Newspaper and traveled to the United States to pursue a master’s degree programme in Journalism. upon her return, she was employed as a Features Writer at Daily Times and rose to become the Group Features Editor.

She later went to New York University and obtained a PhD in communications and political science in 1979.

 After her Ph.D programme, she returned to the Daily Times and was deployed to the editorial board where she worked with other experienced editors like Stanley Macebuh, Dele Giwa and Amma Ogan.

It was, however, to be a short stay as the newly formed National Concord newspaper invited her to be its pioneer daily editor.

She then moved to be an editor of National Concord. She was promoted to be the managing director/editor-in-chief in 1986.

She became the first Nigerian woman to become the editor in chief of a daily newspaper in Nigeria.

She married in 1981. Her career at National Concord Newspaper spanned three decades. She also served in various capacities in the media industry in the country.

 

She was the Chairperson of the Awards Nominating panel at the first Nigerian Media Merit Award to be hosted in the country, and also a member of Advisory Council, Faculty of Social and Management Sciences, Ogun State University.

 

She was a recipient of Diamond Awards for Media Excellence (DAME) for her lifelong devotion to advancing the frontiers of knowledge and strengthening the media as a pillar of democracy.

 

The Trustees of DAME unanimously approved her selection as a recipient of its Lifetime Achievement Award at the 24th DAME Ceremony.

 

She was the second woman to receive a DAME Lifetime Achievement Award after Mrs. OmobolaOnajide) and was later granted Eisenhower Fellowship in 1986.

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