The Goodluck
Jonathan Administration on Friday moved against the Nigerian media by
preventing the circulation of some newspapers and harassing vendors in a
nationwide crackdown that has been likened to the dark days of the military
era.
Armed soldiers and operatives of the State Security Service on Friday
morning raided distribution vans, seized and damaged copies of newspapers
nationwide.
Major Nigerian newspapers were affected by the apparently coordinated
operation.
There were random forceful seizures of newspapers, including The
PUNCH at the Murtala Mohammed International Airport, Ikeja, Lagos, while
distribution vans were stopped and searched in different parts of the country.
Distributors told our correspondents that wrappers of The PUNCH
were stripped off with the cover of some copies damaged, while several copies
of The Nation, Leadership and Daily Trust were confiscated.
One of our circulation officials, who witnessed the situation at the
Murtala Mohammed International Airport, Ikeja, Lagos, said that a group of
heavily armed soldiers stormed the cargo unit of the airport in a search of an
undisclosed newspaper.
The soldiers, who arrived in a commando style at about 4:35am in a bus
used to convey Vanguard newspapers to the airport, vigorously began to
search all papers on ground.
The leader of the team, who spoke to our correspondent, reluctantly
said, “Mr. Man, We have screened your paper, so leave us to do our job.”
The team leader, who was always on phone to communicate the update to
their boss, said, “It is an order from above.”
In Nigeria, order from above is a term used to describe instructions
handed down officially from the Presidency or from some top government
officials.
On the website of the Leadership, the paper said, “Soldiers on
Friday intercepted and destroyed newspaper copies meant for the North-West
region at the Kaduna tollgate. The copies booked for South-South and South-East
regions were also seized by the soldiers.”
According to the newspaper, the soldiers and SSS operatives were said to
be acting on ‘orders from above.’
Similarly, The Nation stated that its distribution vans were
stopped by soldiers who “waylaid the vans along the Area 1 Road, Garki, Abuja,
commanding the drivers to unload.”
“The same scene played out on Benin-Warri Road, Port Harcourt,
Kaduna-Kano Road and Nasarawa-Jos Road,” it said.
Also seized were copies of The Nation meant for the Warri and
Benin areas. The copies were confiscated by soldiers of the 3 Battalion of the
Nigerian Army at Okwuokoko, Delta State.
Scores of soldiers in Ekiti, Oyo, Osun, Ondo and Edo states prevented
all the newspapers from entering the states as early as 5.45am.
Soldiers also invaded newspapers distribution centres in the states and
personally monitored distribution to vendors.
In Ado-Ekiti, armed soldiers stormed Okeyinmi, the town’s major
newspapers distribution area, around 6.10am, demanding copies of The Nation,
Daily Trust and Leadership.
The soldiers came in three Hilux vans marked NA 32 OPS 08, NA 32 0PS 05
and NA 32 OPS 07.
In Akure, the Ondo State capital, soldiers prevented distribution.
Soldiers also prevented newspapers’ distribution in Oke Padre area of
Ibadan, Oyo State.
Disruption was also recorded in Osogbo, Osun State, as 18 soldiers
invaded the distribution centre at Gbaemu.
The soldiers, according to some agents, came to the place around 5am and
waited for the arrival of the newspapers.
To prevent the soldiers from seizing copies of the newspapers and other
newspapers titles, which did not arrive early, it was learnt that salesmen had
to warn delivery drivers on the telephone to stay off the area.
The drivers were said to have diverted the newspapers to unknown places
where they distributed a few copies.
The Osun State Commissioner for Information, Mr. Sunday Akere, described
the development as a surprise.
Distribution in Iseyin, Saki and other towns of Oke-Ogun area of Oyo
State was also disrupted as delivery vans were impounded by soldiers at about
7.30am in Okaka, near Saki.
The Oyo State Police Public Relations Officer, Olabisi Ilobanefor, said
that the command knew nothing about the seizure.
Soldiers stormed the Nigerian Union of Journalists Press Centre in
Benin, Edo State, at about 8am, and searched vehicles en route to the centre.
When contacted, the Army Public Relations Officer, Four Brigade Command,
Benin, Capt. Abdullahi Abubakar, said, “The Army Headquarters has already made
a statement concerning the issue.”
The Editor, Daily trust, Mr. Habeeb Pindiga, said, soldiers seized
copies of Daily Trust newspaper in Port Harcourt as soon as they were
offloaded from the plane.
“In Osogbo, soldiers threatened to arrest any distributor or vendor seen
with Daily Trust,” he added.
He added that most of the company’s vehicles were released in the
evening but that troops set up checkpoints on roads leading to its head office.
Reports also said soldiers intercepted and destroyed Leadership
Newspaper copies in Kaduna.
Likewise, the Managing Editor of The Nation, Mr. Lekan Otufodunrin, said
operational vehicles and newspaper parcels were still in the custody of the
army as of the time of compiling this report.
A statement signed by Otufodunrin, said, “As early as 3.10am on Friday,
June 6, drivers of our distribution vans began filing reports of arrests and
seizures of our vehicles and consignments of newspapers for the day by soldiers
across the country. Areas of our operations affected are Bauchi, Kano, Kaduna,
Jos, Lafia, Okene, Lokoja, Markurdi, Sokoto, Maiduguri, Warri, Benin, Asaba,
Auchi, Akure, Ikare, Ilorin, Ado Ekiti, Ondo, Ore and Ibadan.
“The soldiers, who stormed our offices, arrested the drivers after
searching the vehicles and the consignments. Although nothing incriminating was
found in any of the vans searched, our vehicles and drivers were detained.
“In Abuja, the vehicles heading for Jos, Bauchi, Makurdi, Minna and
other towns in the North were detained and they were not released until about
9am. The Jos-bound vehicle was again detained by another team of soldiers at
Riyam Local Government area about 40 kilometers to Jos and was not released
until 4pm.
“On arrival in Kaduna, the circulation vehicle with the consignment was
detained till late afternoon. In Warri, where the vehicle from Port Harcourt conveying
our papers to Benin, Sapele and other towns in Delta and Edo states was held,
the driver was not released until 4.pm.”
He added, “The vehicles convening our parcels to Akure, Ondo, Ikare from
Lagos were seized at Ore and moved to Okitipupa Army Barrack where it was
detained till 5pm. The parcels from Ibadan, Ilorin and Ado Ekiti could not be
delivered also as the vehicles conveying them were released late yesterday.
“It is necessary to point out that the seizures of the editions of The
Nation and Sportinglife of Friday, June 6, has caused the company
huge losses. The soldiers prevented us from carrying on our legitimate
business. We call on the military authorities to release unconditionally all
our operational vehicles and newspaper parcels still in their custody.”
In an interview with one of our correspondents, the Managing Director of
Leadership Newspaper, Mr. Azubuike Iseikwene, said he was still at a loss as to
why the newspaper was being targeted.
He said “The (security services) didn’t give reasons; they don’t even
understand it themselves. I have received calls from all over the country
indicating that it was actually a coordinated and widespread siege which I find
very curious and I am concerned about.
“No reasons have been given; no explanations. They have attacked vendors
who even sell our Hausa edition, it is incredible. They are still living in the
past, we have also tried to find out what the problem is but we have not
received any explanations.”
Asked if he was aware of any recent story that could have triggered such
an action, Ishiekwene said, “We can only imagine when you are faced with
situations like this but there is a story that we carried on the military which
was streamed on a lot of foreign newsfeeds about generals that have been
court-martialed over Boko Haram.
“We can only suspect that they found that a little irritating. They are
looking for Leadership newspaper everywhere. They are still living in the
past.”
The SSS could not be reached for comment. Calls to its spokesperson,
Marilyn Ogar, were not responded to and a text message sent to her number had
yet to be replied.
Efforts to reach the Chairman of the Newspaper Proprietors Association
of Nigeria, Mr. Nduka Obaigbena, on the clampdown were unsuccessful as several
calls put through to his mobile phone did not go through.
A text message sent to his number was undelivered, with the delivery
status stating “pending.”
But the Nigerian Guild of Editors has condemned the forcible seizure.
In a statement made available to media houses on Friday afternoon, the
President of the Nigerian Guild of Editors, Mr. Femi Adesina, described the
seizure as unacceptable.
Adesina said the action had caused huge economic losses to the
publishing houses.
He said the action showed that the military had been itching to open a
battlefront with the country’s media and thereby hid under the umbrella of
insecurity to wreak the havoc.
The NGE president said, “The media do not bear arms; rather, we bear
information, which sheds light on darkness, no matter how seemingly
impenetrable the darkness is. Let no one accuse the media of any flimsy and
nebulous security breach, and hide under that umbrella to traumatise us.
“We reject the label of bearer of arms, or any other form of ordinance,
to do mischief against our own country.
“If the siege arose out of the need to call the dog a bad name in order
to hang it, Nigerian editors roundly and soundly reject such negative
profiling.”
Reacting to the development, a Lagos-based lawyer and human rights
activist, Festus Keyamo, condemned the attack and described it as barbaric and
uncivilised.
He said, “It is a breach of the provisions of the constitution,
especially Chapter Four, which guarantees freedom of expression and freedom of
the press. Such Act curtails free speech and poses a danger to the sustenance
of democracy because it is free speech that sustains democracy.”
Another legal practitioner, Jiti Ogunye, said the incident was an
unprovoked assault on the press, the right to freedom of association and the
constitutional role of the media.
Ogunye said, “It is a reminder of the era of brutal siege on the media
during the military era, which is a sad pointer to the that constitutionally
guaranteed rights are still under threat. Not even the belated, weak,
incoherent and disingenuous explanation given by the Defence Headquarters can
make Nigerians to believe that the right to freedom of expression is not under
assault.”
He said the Nigeria Army and the government owe the Nigerian media an
unreserved apology and that such flagrant assault would not happen again.
In a similar tone, an activist, Mr. Malachi Ugwummadu, condemned the
action, describing it as a threat to the nation’s democracy.
Ugwummadu said the action of the military was unacceptable especially
barely a week after the Commissioner of Police in the Federal Capital
Territory, Joseph Mbu, banned the activities of the group clamouring for the
release of the abducted schoolgirls.
He said, “It is highly regrettable this happened under Jonathan’s watch.
It is clearly against the tenets of democracy. In less than one week ago, the
overzealous Commissioner of Police of the FCT, Joseph Mbu, banned the
activities of the BringBackOurGirls campaign with a bizarre claim of constituting
nuisance to the country. It is a pity.
He said, “Going by this development, the same government is reminding us
of the battles we had fought and won as a country. This is against the
constitution.
“The action of the military contradicts the provisions of the
constitution of the country as it directly contradicts Section 39 of the
constitution; it is a deliberate attempt by this government to roll back the
hands of the clock and ruin the success of the country. It is against the
rights of the people.”
Ugwummadu added that the security agencies should rather focus on
attacking the Boko Haram terrorists and not harassing the media based on
whatever reason they might claim.”
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Nigeria need prayers to get out of its current leadership failures
ReplyDeleteJonathan is losing focus.if you seize the newspaers the citizens will be very interested in knowing why and must read and probe your action.i wonder who is advising him to do this.
ReplyDeleteWhat else when the head is clueless n bastardly corrupt
ReplyDeleteMy greates surprise is when some pple still have the gut to say GEJ must still be in aso rock come 2015.I think it is high time for GEJ to leave aso rock.
ReplyDeleteGej u do well joor all dis apc ppl wan spoil ur government by all means making us to believe ur government is bad. We know u have good ideas for dis country
ReplyDeleteJonathan it is obvious u have notin to offer this country and u are not worth to be a governor talkless our president all u know is to loot our treasure,what u have just done is a breach our constitution and impechable offence
ReplyDeleteFreedom of speech is not to be messed up by croak of anti Jonathan administration.they shld think b4 putin any thing in writtiing
ReplyDeleteThis is a clear manifestation that Jonathan is confuse . He should understand that freedom of the press is one of the indices for rating a growing democracy. Revolution will son chase him out of Aso rock. Rather than using the soldiers to rescue our girls, you arg unit template to intimidate armless Nigerians. Shameless ogogoro man.
ReplyDeleteReading the about the strategic positionong by the military how the co-ordinated and stopped the sales of newspapers, if that same tactics are applied to sambisa forest bh will be a thing of the past. But gej yab sha!
ReplyDeleteIf only our military used this co-ordination to free the over 200 girls kidnapped by bh, gej has continually shown that he dos'nt have any clue about democracy but have decided to be a democratically elected president in 2015. Am sure all we can do is talk, talk and more talks as he continues to reign impuinity on the nation. Joseph mbu is still a police man after all he did in rivers and now abuja nigerians will need more than talking to set the record straight.
ReplyDeleteMay be u should guns nd dynamites 2 aso rock nd start bombardment immediately.criticism of Raphael nd victory ofuchi a colabo of tombo nd Hennessy
ReplyDelete