The Guardian (Nigeria)

Lawmakers buckle, suspend media censorship bill, reject Onochie

- From Azimazi Momoh Jimoh, Adamu Abuh, John Akubo, Matthew Ogune ( Abuja) and Sunday Aikulola ( Lagos)

• Press Bill: We are suspending process for more consultati­on, says sponsor • Falana urges NPAN, NUJ, NGE to form new code of conduct • Ozekhome: Federal character as reason for rejecting Onochie face- saving • PDP insist on more effort to secure electoral act • Buhari parleys lawmakers over insecurity • Hire private contractor­s to fight insurgency, Reps tell Buhari

I Tseemed the triumph of people’s power as both chambers of the National Assembly, yesterday, buckled to strident opposition from the public and key stakeholde­rs to the Nigeria Press Council ( NPC) and National Broadcasti­ng Commission ( NBC) Amendment Bill, as well as the nomination of Lauretta Onochie as Commission­er of the Independen­t National Electoral Commission ( INEC).

A day after national dailies boldly printed ‘ Informatio­n Blackout’ on their front pages to raise support against the proposed

NPC/ NBC amendment bill that would allow authoritie­s to control the press and shrink civic space, Segun Odebunmi, the lawmaker sponsoring the bill, yesterday said the House of Representa­tives has agreed to stay action on it.

Odebunmi, who is the Chairman House of Representa­tives Committee on Informatio­n National Orientatio­n Ethics and Values, told Channels TV that the suspension was necessary for proper consultati­on over the bill while appearing on Sunrise Daily.

“We have been on this process for a while and right now, we have suspended it for more consultati­on to happen on it,” he said.

The lawmaker had earlier faulted claims that the Bill was targeted at gagging the media. He rather maintained that it is aimed at removing identified hindrances to optimum performanc­e.

Lawmakers said the bills are intended to curb fake news, but critics said the bills would give authoritie­s the power to hit media outlets and journalist­s with huge fines and give journalist­s up to three years in jail.

While the Federal Government already regulates broadcast media organisati­ons through the NBC, it now seeks to extend regulation­s to online platforms.

In June, the government suspended the operations of social media giant, Twitter, over what it described as national security concerns. Subsequent­ly, all social media platforms were asked to register with the NBC, while all broadcast stations were ordered to stop using Twitter.

Media sanctions have become more frequently discussed since President Muhammadu Buhari was first elected in 2015. Between 2017 and 2019, lawmakers considered a bill to regulate social media, and another bill proposing death penalty for anyone promoting hate speech. Both bills were suspended after public outcries.

Human rights lawyer, Femi Falana, has stressed the need for members of Newspapers Proprietor­s Associatio­n of Nigeria ( NPAN), Nigeria Union of Journalist­s ( NUJ) and Nigeria Guild of Editors ( NGE) to develop new code of conduct for the media to selfregula­te.

Speaking at the 13th Wole Soyinka Centre Media Lecture Series in Lagos yesterday, he advised that “you have to self- regulate. There is a lot of mess going on. If you don’t self- regulate, they are going to regulate you. NPAN, NUJ and NGE should meet urgently and come up with new code of conduct. Because today, one or two people can sit down in the house and set up an online medium and begin to send messages, some of which are meant to blackmail.”

Speaking further, he said: “They have just approved a budget of N4.8 billion to the security forces to monitor your telephone conversati­ons and Whatsapp so that when you are communicat­ing and they sense the message is dangerous, you are going to be arrested. Have no fear because by virtue of Section 37 of the Constituti­on, your right to telephone and your correspond­ence are protected. The money has been voted, but we are not going to allow them spend the money.”

Continuing, he noted that concerning government­s decision to punish those that use Twitter, “we have gone to court and the court has given an injunction until the determinat­ion of the case, those using Twitter should not be punished.”

With the theme: Remaking Nigeria, towards a secure and viable union, Chief Executive Officer, Wole Soyinka Cenre for Investigat­ive Journalism ( WSCIJ), Motunrayo Alaka, noted that Nigeria has many challenges that are important and urgent: “There is despair in the land. Hope is dwindling but we cannot afford to give up or do nothing. Our only option is to fight until we win because we can and we will win.”

Like the House, the Senate, yesterday, bowed to pressures when it rejected the nomination of Lauretta Onochie ( Delta) and stood down that of Prof. Sani Muhammad Adam ( North Central) for further legislativ­e action by the committee, while confirming the appointmen­t of five nominees as INEC Commission­ers.

Those confirmed include Prof. Abdullahi Abdu Zuru ( North- West), Prof. Muhammad Sani Kallah ( Katsina), Prof. Kunle Cornelius Ajayi ( Ekiti), Dr. Baba Bila ( NorthEast), and Saidu Babura Ahmad ( Jigawa).

The rejection of Onochie followed the considerat­ion of a report by the Senate Committee on INEC. Chairman of the Committee, Senator Kabiru Gaya ( APC, Kano South), in his presentati­on, said the Committee received several petitions against the nomination­s of Ms. Lauretta Onochie and Prof. Sani Adam. He disclosed that the petitions against Onochie were on the backdrop of her involvemen­t in politics and alleged membership of a political party.

He explained further that her nomination violated the Federal Character Principle as there is already a serving National Electoral Commission­er from Delta State, May Agbamuche- Mbu, who was screened and confirmed by the Eighth Senate.

Nigerians were apprehensi­ve, wandering if the Senate was going to play to the gallery by endorsing the illegality of appointing a cardcarryi­ng member of the ruling party as an umpire in any election.

A popular Senior Advocate of Nigeria ( SAN), Mike Ozekhome, said: “I think for once something good has come out of Egypt in terms of something positive coming out of the Ninth Senate, which I had described as the worst National Assembly. However, I do not agree with them that the main reason is the federal character principle because May Agbamuche is from Delta and Onochie is also from Niger Delta. I think that was a face- saving device and soft landing for the Senate in not squaring up to the truth of the matter.

“The truth of the matter is that Onochie has been one of the most rabid supporters and card- carrying members of the APC in Asaba, Aniocha North Local Council of Delta State. She is not just a party member, she has always been the assistant to President Buhari on Social Media

and she has used the social media to attack every and all Nigerians that disagree with her boss.

“So, she was partisan, and she was brutally so without any guilt or shame. It was good riddance to bad rubbish that the Senate rejected her. Whether for reason of federal character or for reason of her partisansh­ip, the important thing is that she was rejected,” he said.

THE Peoples Democratic Party ( PDP) in its reaction described Onochie’s rejection as the triumph of the Nigerian people over “barefaced attempt by the Buhari led- APC administra­tion to corrupt and hijack the commission ahead of 2023 elections.”

The PDP asserted that the rejection of Onochie by Nigerians has saved the nation from very serious crisis, adding that “it has also salvaged INEC and the entire electoral process from a ruinous pollution that would have led to the collapse of our democratic order.”

The PDP in a statement by its National Publicity Secretary, Kola Ologbondiy­an, noted that “Onochie’s vexatious nomination, in total affront to paragraph 14 of the 3rd schedule of the 1999 Constituti­on ( as amended), was a very dangerous machinatio­n by the presidency against our electoral process, in the attempt to subvert the will of the people in the 2023 elections.

“Our party, therefore, commends Nigerians, including civil society organisati­ons, the media as well as other political parties, for joining forces with the PDP in fighting for the sanctity of our electoral process by resisting Onochie’s nomination.”

A group, Concerned Nigerians, has called on the Inspector General of Police ( IGP) to begin immediate prosecutio­n of Onochie for brazenly lying under oath. The group in a statement yesterday in Abuja by its spokespers­on, Theophilus Abuh Agada, commended the Senate for showing courage in rejecting the nomination of Onochie.

The group also enjoined President Buhari to sign the amended electoral bill as it will strengthen Nigeria’s electoral process and ensure transparen­cy and credibilit­y in the conduct of elections.

MEANWHILE, President Buhari on Tuesday night met with members of the National Assembly in a dinner at the Villa at about 8: 00p. m. The scheduled meeting with the President was to enable lawmakers discuss the issue of insecurity in the country.

The House of Representa­tives has urged the President to urgently consider the use of private defence contractor­s for targeted security operations to combat insurgency and terrorism. This was among the 19 recommenda­tions made by the Special Committee on National Security.

It would be recalled that following the escalating security situation in the country, the House in June this year convoked a summit to help find lasting solutions to the menace. The report of the Committee laid before the House on July 8, was considered yesterday.

Moving the motion for its considerat­ion, the Speaker, Femi Gbajabiami­la, said a large number of Nigerians from different background­s and experience­s were consulted on the matter to make inputs.

 ??  ?? Mrs. Cathy Echeozo, Chairperso­n, NGX Regulation Ltd ( left); Mr. Hezekiah Oyinlola, Non- Executive Director, Gtbank Nigeria; Ibrahim Hassan, Non- Executive Director, Gtbank Nigeria; Mr. Segun Agbaje, Group Chief Executive Officer, Guaranty Trust Holding Company ( GTCO) Plc; Mr. Temi Popoola, CFA Chief Executive Officer, Nigerian Exchange ( NGX) Limited; Mrs. Osaretin Demuren, Outgoing Chairman, Gtbank Nigeria; Mrs. Miriam Olusanya, Executive Director, Gtbank Nigeria; Mr. Seyi Osunkeye, Non- Executive Director, NGX Ltd and other NGX Ltd Executives during the Closing Gong Ceremony to mark the listing of GTCO Plc on the NGX in Lagos… yesterday.
Mrs. Cathy Echeozo, Chairperso­n, NGX Regulation Ltd ( left); Mr. Hezekiah Oyinlola, Non- Executive Director, Gtbank Nigeria; Ibrahim Hassan, Non- Executive Director, Gtbank Nigeria; Mr. Segun Agbaje, Group Chief Executive Officer, Guaranty Trust Holding Company ( GTCO) Plc; Mr. Temi Popoola, CFA Chief Executive Officer, Nigerian Exchange ( NGX) Limited; Mrs. Osaretin Demuren, Outgoing Chairman, Gtbank Nigeria; Mrs. Miriam Olusanya, Executive Director, Gtbank Nigeria; Mr. Seyi Osunkeye, Non- Executive Director, NGX Ltd and other NGX Ltd Executives during the Closing Gong Ceremony to mark the listing of GTCO Plc on the NGX in Lagos… yesterday.

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