Onslaught on newspapers by the Federal Government evokes suppressive tendencies of military rule, AKEEM LASISI, FRIDAY OLOKOR, FOLASHADE ADEBAYO, ALLWELL OKPI and ADE ADESOMOJU write
Last week, President
Goodluck Jonathan engaged the reverse gear and dragged Nigeria back into
time. In different parts of the country, the military, which answers to
Jonathan as Commander-in-Chief reenacted its infamous roles in the era
of Nigerian military dictatorship.
Soldiers, who claimed they were acting
on orders from above, fanned out to steal and seize newspapers,
brutalise vendors and distributors and cripple the distribution
mechanisms of major newspaper houses. The operations affected all the
major newspapers in the country, especially The Punch, The Nation, Daily
Trust, LEADERSHIP and Vanguard.
Analysts have described the operations
which began in the wee hours of Friday as the closest thing to a coup
planned and executed against the fourth estate of the realm.
Describing what happened, The Chairman
of the Board of Trustees of Newspaper Distributors in Abuja, Mr.
Oladipupo Moses, said the soldiers led by an officer in a green
tracksuit impounded distribution vehicles.
He said, “They impounded all our
distribution vans. The soldiers then searched all of us. They didn’t
allow us to distribute newspapers.”
The military’s move attracted
condemnation from all over the globe. The international community, the
Nigerian opposition, the civil society and the public were unanimous in
condemning the military’s brigandage.
Critics argued that the military did not
only obstruct the lawful entrepreneurship that the media owners,
managers and their staff are engaging in, it trampled on the right of
the public to information and deepened the climate of fear that
insurgency, widespread corruption and official inefficiency have spread
across the country.
The Committee to Protect Journalists
described the attack on the media as a “persecution.” Its Africa
Programme Coordinator, Sue Valentine, said, “Journalists and news
outlets have been targeted by both sides in Nigeria’s protracted war
against extremist sect, Boko Haram, which seeks to establish Islamic
rule in Northern Nigeria. Security agents have used the pretext of the
insurgency to threaten, harass, detain, and seize the equipment of
journalists.”
The All Progressives Congress also warned that a clampdown on the media was a war President Jonathan could not win.
In a statement issued in Lagos on Sunday
by its Interim National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Lai Mohammed, the
party said the President failed to learn the lessons of history that the
Nigerian media could neither be intimidated nor suppressed by anyone,
and that all those who tried to do so in the past lived to regret their
actions.
It said, ‘’Even if one believes the
administration’s babble that President Jonathan holds the media in high
esteem, how can that be justified by the indignities being meted out to
the media under his watch? How does the so-called intelligence report
justify the arrest of media workers, detention of distribution vans and
the impounding of newspapers? How does it justify the restriction of
newspaper circulation? How does it justify an administration’s efforts
to tamper with fundamental rights guaranteed by the nation’s
constitution?
“With the clampdown on the media, the
Jonathan administration has opened a new but dangerous flank in its war
against Nigerians. The outcry against the obviously-orchestrated ban on
peaceful protests had barely died down when the government moved to
stifle press freedom. But it is a lost battle.’’
As the siege gathered steam and prepared
to enter the second day, the military scrambled to offer an explanation
that would stem the criticisms. According to the Director of Defence
Information, Maj.- Gen. Chris Olukolade, the onslaught was launched
after security agencies received “intelligence reports indicating
movement of material with grave security implications across the
country, using the channel of newsprint-related consignments.”
Contrary to the expectations of many
inquiring and right-thinking members of the society, Olukolade did not
explain if the “materials with grave security implications” were found
in the newspaper vans seized. He also did not explain why the newspapers
were seized and staff detained.
The next day, Saturday, brought more
cause for concerns. Soldiers continued the operation, thus giving
stakeholders an impression that the exercise might have come to stay.
SATURDAY PUNCH could not distribute early because soldiers barricaded
the newspaper distribution centre at Garki, ‘Area One’, marching out
newspaper marketers, distributors and vendors around 2am.
Just like in most parts of the country,
armed soldiers prevented marketers from offloading newspapers from
distribution vans that brought the papers to the centre.
The military men searched each of the
marketers, distributors and vendors before allowing them to enter the
centre. The situation worsened around 7am when the soldiers ordered them
to go home, declaring that they would not allow distribution of the
newspapers.
When the workers of the media houses and
distributors assembled near the centre, the soldiers dispersed them,
threatening to deal with anyone who failed to leave the area.
Also on Saturday, hopes that President
Jonathan would leash the rampaging military men were dashed when Senior
Special Assistant to the President on Public Affairs, Dr. Doyin Okupe,
all but gave the illegal military exercise a pass mark.
“The military has explained that the
checks followed intelligence reports on the possibility of some elements
within the society using such vehicles to convey materials with grave
security implications across the country. You cannot neglect security
threats because we are living in trying times. If the security of the
country is at stake, some segments may have to undergo some discomfort.
This is what we have to face because our country is under siege.
“Gentlemen of the press will recall that
it was President Goodluck Jonathan who signed the very contentious
Freedom of Information Bill into law immediately on assumption of office
and has consistently espoused the principles of openness,
accountability and liberalism in its relationship with the Media at all
times,” said Okupe in a statement.
In the aftermath of these incidents,
fears have been expressed in several quarters in Nigeria that the dark
fog of dictatorship and military rascality that enveloped Nigeria during
her long, dark years of military rule might be creeping back.
These fears have persisted despite the
obvious fact that this is supposed to be a democratic era with a sitting
President and all apparatus of civilian rule in place.
But among the country’s media
practitioners, the fear is that Nigeria’s military may return to its old
ways and familiar tactics may go full circle.
Those who have expressed this fear are
quick to cite certain unsavoury happenstances during the dictatorship of
Gen. Abacha to buttress this argument.
It was common during this era for the
military to accuse pro-democracy activists and journalists of planting
bombs and launching attacks against government institutions.
In May 1995, after a bomb explosion
rocked an event attended by the dictator’s wife, Maryam Abacha, in
Ilorin, Kwara State, the police arrested NADECO members and accused them
of planting the bombs.
While Abacha’s reign of terror lasted,
the Federal Government accused several NADECO stalwarts and even the US
ambassador of planting the bombs that were targeted at military
formations in the country.
While bombs went off in Lagos, Ibadan,
Onitsha, Kaduna and Ile-Ife, assassins believed to be agents of the
state killed some prominent Nigerians at different times. Rear Admiral
Babatunde Elegbede [Retd.], Admiral Olu Omotehinwa, Mrs. Kudirat Abiola,
Chief Alfred Rewane, Mrs. Bisoye Tejuosho, Mrs. Suliat Adedeji and Dr.
Shola Omosola were a among the most prominent people assassinated by
suspected agents of the Abacha regime.
Others had a narrow escape. They were
Abraham Adesanya, the leader of Afenifere, the pan-Yoruba cultural
group; Chief Bola Ige, Alex Ibru, a former Minister for Internal
Affairs, Gen. Alani Akinrinade, a retired army officer considered to be
“military commander” of NADECO; Chief Gani Fawehinmi, a popular human
rights activist in Lagos; Air Commodore Dan Suleiman [Retd.], one of the
few northern Nigerians in NADECO; Prof. Omo Omoruyi, the former
director of the Centre for Democratic Studies, Abuja; Justice Omotunde
Ilori, a prominent social critic; and Chief Abiola Opadokun, the then
secretary of NADECO.
A number of serving military officers
were also targeted by the terrorists, the most prominent were Col. Buba
Marwa, a former Military Administrator of Lagos and Lt. Gen. Oladipo
Diya, the then Chief of General Staff to Abacha.
Not surprisingly, the action of the government and the military has given birth to pertinent questions among Nigerians.
One of the major ones in many circles is: after 15 years of democracy has the leopard changed its skin?
After the end of the regime, revelations
from its key players showed that rogue agents of the Nigerian state, in
the military and intelligence services, were behind the killings and
bombings.
Watchers have expressed fears that
remnants of the rogue elements of the Abacha junta may dust their
operational manuals and put them to use again. Specifically, it has been
said that the military may plant “materials with grave security
implications” in newspaper vehicles to give the impression that the
authorities were right, after all.
For Lagos-based lawyer, Bamidele Aturu,
government would need to take urgent confidence building measures to
assure Nigerians that the country will not descend into the anarchy of
the Abacha years.
He says, “What the military has done is
not justified at all. If you are looking for bombs and you check inside
vehicles and find newspapers and you could not find what you were
looking for. Why then do you seize newspapers? The military ought to
apologise to the people. By seizing newspapers, the soldiers went beyond
their brief. This onslaught on the media is detestable.
“There is no doubt that as we get close
to 2015, politicians are getting unreasonable. Some of them might think
that the best way to get their way through would be to clamp down on the
media but that is a total mistake. Since the press survived under that
military and under colonial rule, they should know that there is no way
they can gag the press in Nigeria.”
In his view, the only person who can
move the nation quickly away from the unfortunate events of last week is
the person who is in the driver’s seat. The man who changed the gear to
reverse.
He said, “I don’t see how the President
can exonerate himself from the show of shame because he is the
Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces and this thing has been done by
military men and women. The Presidency has, in some sense, justified the
action of the military. If he did not know about it, then he should
call the military to order and ensure that those who have done it get
punished. If he doesn’t do that, we will assume that he is baring his
fangs; that he is beginning to show uneasiness because of 2015.”
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