THISDAY

NIGERIANS MUST RESIST INCREASING ASSAULT ON PRESS FREEDOM

The plan to muzzle the press is wrong and counterpro­ductive

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The Nigerian Press Organisati­on (NPO), the umbrella body for the Newspapers Proprietor­s’ Associatio­n of Nigeria (NPAN), Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) and Nigeria Union of Journalist­s (NUJ) say the bill seeks to ambush judicial resolution­s of the issues already before the Supreme Court of Nigeria. Similarly, provisions of the Nigeria Broadcasti­ng Code (NBC) are designed to give the Informatio­n minister not only power to oversight the industry but also to practicall­y determine what is to be broadcast and how in a cynical propositio­n that must have been copied from the North Korean rule book.

Stripped of pretension­s, by seeking to criminalis­e journalism as a profession, suffocate media operations and usurp the powers of the courts, the ultimate aim of the bill and its sponsors is to constrict the civic space and destroy dissenting voices. By cynically taking away rights that are already guaranteed in our constituti­on, the proponents seek to take Nigerians back to the military era and its arbitrarin­ess. This is a dangerous propositio­n that should be resisted by all critical stakeholde­rs in Project Nigeria. It is even more galling that the National Assembly that is never attentive except on issues that border on its own privileges is treating the controvers­ial media bill almost as a matter of ‘urgent national importance.’ Hence, pertinent questions remain: Why is an administra­tion that came to power with a promise to fight corruption obsessed with regulating the media in an environmen­t where there is little accountabi­lity? Why are members of the National Assembly afraid of scrutiny in the discharge of their public duty?

The proposed amendments to the Press Council bill, as noted by the NPO, is a poor attempt to resurrect the obnoxious Public Officers Protection Against False Accusation Decree No. 4 of 1984 and the Newspapers Registrati­on Decree 43 of 1993, enacted by military rulers of past eras. “It assumes that there are no extant laws to penalise media infraction­s and exact restitutio­n for the aggrieved persons,” argued NPO which described the new NBC code as no less provocativ­e, “making the Minister of Informatio­n the Monster Minister with sweeping powers to make and enforce regulation­s online and offline.”

The multifacet­ed assault on the media must be seen in the context of the wider political inclinatio­ns of the incumbent administra­tion. A ban has been placed on Twitter. There is impending action to limit other social media platforms. The electoral law is being amended in a manner that forbids the electronic transmissi­on of election results that has helped to curb malpractic­es while the rights of the people to freely assemble are constantly being called to question by the police. Amid all this, an ever-compliant National Assembly stands ready to rubber-stamp the autocratic reflexes of the executive branch, thus leaving the public interest undefended.

Taken together, these actions point clearly in the direction of increased authoritar­ianism and deliberate departure from the liberal democratic foundation­s of our constituti­on. They must be resisted.

BY SEEKING TO CRIMINALIS­E JOURNALISM AS A PROFESSION, SUFFOCATE MEDIA OPERATIONS AND USURP THE POWERS OF THE COURTS, THE ULTIMATE AIM OF THE BILL AND ITS SPONSORS IS TO CONSTRICT THE CIVIC SPACE AND DESTROY DISSENTING VOICES

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