Toyosi ogunseye biography

Toyosi Ogunseye

As President & CEO of the Presidential Precinct, Toyosi Ogunseye ensures strategic direction in the organization’s commitment to delivering world-class leadership programming that engages and inspires emerging leaders.

In addition to President & CEO, Toyosi is a program alumna of the Presidential Precinct, having participated in the 2014 Mandela Washington Fellowship. As such, she brings unprecedented perspective to organizational priorities and program development.

Toyosi has two decades of leadership experience in journalism, most recently serving as a Senior News Editor for News and Commissioning at the BBC. She began her tenure with the BBC as Head of West Africa Language Services. Prior to joining the BBC, Toyosi was the first female editor in the 50-year history of Punch Newspaper, Nigeria’s most widely read newspaper. In addition, she recently concluded her term as Vice President of the World Editors Forum and Board member of the World Association of News Publishers.

While gaining experience across multiple disciplines and several continents, T

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Editorial

Young, female, investigative journalist and African. What else? Her name is Oluwatoyosi Ogunseye, but everybody calls her Toyosi. Nigerian of the Yoruba ethnic group, one of the largest in West Africa which, along with many groups with related languages and cultures, is concentrated in the south-western provinces of Nigeria extending as far as the Atlantic coast. Africa is the future, and Toyosi already embodies the Africa of the future, the one it strives and ought to be. Educated, passionate, committed, well-loved and happy. She talks to us about an investigative journalism that doesn’t exist in Italy, if it has ever existed. That style of journalism that manages to change, little by little, things for people. This time, in my editorial, I’m not going to focus on what she’s told us, but on everything we’ve learnt about her and that motivated us to interview her. Toyosi always publicly expresses her gratitude for the people who opened the doors to journalism for her, starting with her first ‘boss’ Dipo Kehinde, crime news editor-in-chief. Kehinde introd

Oluwatoyosi Ogunseye, a winner of the 2014 ICFJ Knight International Journalism Award, is a veteran investigative reporter whose environmental and health stories have made a widespread impact on Nigerian communities.

Ogunseye is the youngest and first female editor in the 40-year history of Sunday Punch, a widely read Lagos newspaper. In a three-part series, she proved that residents in a well-to-do community in Lagos had high levels of toxins in their blood caused by pollutants from a nearby steel plant. The coverage prompted the government to shut down the plant, and to allow it to reopen only under strict new regulations.

Her investigation into the death of a student who fell into a pit latrine resulted in a government initiative to replace the dangerous facilities. Another of her stories revealed how a nuclear power plant was about to be built in a poor neighborhood. After her piece ran, citizens mobilized, sued the government and stopped construction.

Her story on how newborns were dying at a top Nigerian hospital due to lack of adequate facilities forced the hospital to b

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