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FILE - Police officers pull a journalist during an anti-government protest in Lagos, August 5, 2019. |
WASHINGTON - Nigeria is one of West Africa’s "most
dangerous and difficult countries for journalists," an international media
watchdog has said.
Expanded state surveillance, the spread of disinformation,
and arbitrary arrests of journalists who report critically on the ruling
political establishment were cited as the main obstacles to press freedom by
Reporters Without Borders (RSF).
In its 2020 annual World Press Freedom Index, RSF ranked
Nigeria 115 out of 180 countries, in which one is considered the freest.
Other rights groups have also expressed alarm about
conditions for the media in Nigeria over the past year.
The Media Foundation for West Africa said
Nigeria was among the countries in the region where journalists are assaulted,
attacked, or have had equipment seized and destroyed while covering COVID-19,
the respiratory ailment triggered by the coronavirus.
Nigerian laws designed to safeguard press freedoms aren't
being enforced, said Lagos-based freelance journalist Orji Sunday.
“Nigeria
enjoys relative press freedom... because we have very robust documents backing
press freedom in the country — but, in reality, there's very little to defend
the beauty of [those laws]," he told VOA.
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FILE - Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari attends a press briefing after meeting with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa in Pretoria, South Africa, Oct. 3, 2019. |
Under the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari, reporting on corrupt politicians, police brutality, human rights abuses, or even the Boko Haram insurgency, he added, is not only logistically challenging, but potentially dangerous.
"These
are the kinds of stories that journalists find a lot of difficulty having
access to the information that should guide their work every day," said
Sunday, who regularly contributes to the Al Jazeera news site, the non-profit
environmental publication Mongabay, and The Guardian newspaper.
"We've
had journalists beaten, jailed, threatened, and their families humiliated,
because they covered a story that a particular politician deemed to be very
embarrassing.”
In
April, the U.S.-based Committee to Protect
Journalists (CPJ) reported that Ebonyi State Governor Dave Umahi questioned journalist
Chijioke Agwu over a report about Lassa fever at a press conference and then
ordered police to take him away.
“Umahi
then publicly accused Agwu of publishing ‘false and damaging’ information that
violated Section 35 of Ebonyi’s new state law on COVID-19 and other infectious
diseases,” said Jonathan Rozen, CPJ’s senior Africa researcher. Rozen said Agwu
was released later without charge.
In
the early hours of May 9, Nigeria's Department of State Services (DSS) raided
the Bayelsa state home of Naija Live TV founder Saint Mienpamo Onitsha, seizing his
phone.
According to the CPJ, the DSS agents drove
Onitsha around blindfolded for hours before bringing him to a local DSS office,
where he was interrogated and later released without charge on May 12.
Nigerian law says police may not detain
any suspect for longer than 48 hours without a court order.
Nigerian
lawmakers are currently reviewing legislation that would criminalize spreading
false information online and allow the government to order internet shutdowns
and block access to social media sites such as WhatsApp, Facebook and
Twitter.
The
2019 Protection from Internet Falsehood
and Manipulation Bill, which carries penalties including up to three
years in prison or fines of up to 300,000 naira (U.S. $770), doubles down on
Abuja’s efforts to criminalize free speech.
"Nigeria
has criminal defamation on its books already, so this is just another example
of the criminalization of speech," Rozen told VOA, adding that the draft
legislation has been criticized by journalists and civil society groups for
being overly vague.
If
passed, he said, it could become Nigeria's latest
tool for suppressing journalists.
"There's
already a Cybercrime Act, which was passed at the very end of [former
president] Goodluck Jonathan's term in 2015," he said. Rozen said that legislation was
similarly vague and "repeatedly used against the press."
Journalists
in Nigeria also risk arrest. While the
number of imprisoned journalists across the continent has
remained fairly steady over the past year, the CPJ reported that "freedom
of expression is backsliding in... Nigeria, which does not bode well for
journalists."
Accusations
of being anti-state are sometimes used against the media.
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FILE - Journalists and supporters surround Omoyele Sowore just outside Department of State Security headquarters in Abuja, Nigeria, Dec. 24, 2019. (Timothy Obiezu/VOA) |
Omoyele Sowore, founder of the U.S.-headquartered news site Sahara Reporters, was recently charged with treason after a legal dispute with Nigerian officials.
Sowore, who ran against Buhari in Nigeria’s February 2019
presidential contest, was detained in August for organizing nationwide rallies
against corruption and allegations of unfair elections. He was held until late
December, despite multiple court orders for his release.
"It is clear that the right to freedom of expression
is increasingly under threat in Nigeria," said a PEN International
commentary about Sowore, who is on bail but restricted from
leaving the country. PEN is a global network of writers.
Officials at Nigeria’s Washington embassy did not respond
to VOA’s emailed requests for comment.
Aside from legal risks, Nigeria has a poor record in
securing justice for journalists murdered for their work.
At least five journalists have been killed in relation to
their work since 2010, according to CPJ, which ranks Nigeria 12th on its 2019
impunity index.
"We've had journalists who have lost their lives also
along the way reporting some of the most important stories,” Sunday told
VOA.
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