Leadership Newspaper, media responsibility & the police. By Reuben Abati
The police wanted the journalist to reveal the source of their story...which claimed that the presidency was planning to scuttle the merger of APC and target key leaders of the emerging political party.
The journalists arrested are: Mrs. Chinyere Fred-Adegbulugbe, the director of human capital; Mr. Chuks Ohuegbe, managing editor; Mr. Tony Amokeodo, the group news editor; and Mr. Chibuzor Ukaibe, a political reporter.
The presidency has released a statement concerning the matter via presidential spokesman, Reuben Abati. Find the statement after the cut...
State House Press Release
Leadership Newspaper, Media Responsibility and
the Police
By Reuben Abati
Our
attention has been drawn to a statement by the Leadership Newspaper
titled “Statement on the Arrest and Detention
of LEADERSHIP journalists” (April 10), the latest episode in the matters
arising from the same newspaper’s publication of an alleged
“Presidential
Directive” which we have had cause to disavow because the basis of the
story proved
to have been a dubious ‘bromide’ containing nothing more than “a
mishmash of
carefully arranged and concocted lies, presented to the public as
evidence of a
document emanating from the presidency.” Yet, the Leadership newspaper
insisted
that “it stood by its story.”
As a responsible
government committed to providing good governance and protecting the
rule of
law, the rebuttal from the presidency was appropriate; yet its symbolism
runs
far deeper. It ordinarily ought to have
motivated all concerned with or related to the process and issues
contained
therein, particularly the publishers and editors, to double check their
claims,
and where errors had been made, to quickly retract the story. This
would have been in line with the ethics
of professionalism, good conduct and unbiased reporting.
This approach
reflects the crucial role of a bridge which a best-practice media
performs, in
the management of the civil engagement between elected officials and the
citizenry. Underpinning this social contract is the principle that the
freedom
of expression goes hand in hand with great responsibility. Given the
Leadership
Newspaper’s insistence that it stood by its story, questions are
automatically
raised about professional ethics and the social responsibility of the
media,
which certainly, by the rules and codes of practice of the various media
associations in the country do not accommodate the publication of
falsehood, or
inciting material, or the abuse of the media’s constitutional mandate.
The
circulation of a fictitious ‘presidential directive’ that seeks in the
main to
cause civil strife, engender a breakdown of law and order, and negate
the
values of our democracy is a very grievous act indeed that should not be
ignored. At its core, such a disruptive act erodes the ethos of
governance and
professionalism and naturally stirs up those entrusted with the
protection of
law and order; as it should also, every responsible citizen, interest
group and
the entire media. In that regard, President Jonathan did not have to
issue any
orders before those who have as much constitutional responsibility as
the media;
that is, the police, see the need to act in the public interest.
Without
holding brief for the law enforcement and security agencies, such a
publication, like all others that threaten our democracy and undermine
law and
order, become the duty of the Police as an institution to investigate. The
Leadership newspaper should see this
as an opportunity to co-operate with the police as required by the laws
of the
land. The Police have not done anything
outside the law. The trite rule is that nobody is above the laws of the
land.
It is also within the powers of the Police to invite persons for
questioning
and to conduct investigations, which is what they have done so far in
“The
Leadership case”. Or are the editors of the Leadership newspaper
insisting that
they are above the laws of the land?
This
administration believes in and has demonstrated its commitment to press
freedom
times over. The Freedom of Information Bill (FOI) was signed by this
President
into law and under this government the Nigerian print and electronic
media has
grown in number, reach and in terms of freedom to practise. It will be
disingenuous to suggest that there is a clampdown of any sort or an
attempt to
stifle the press.
Why
shouldn't journalists normally cooperate with the police in this
instance? We
believe that it has to do with the fundamentals of professional ethos
that make
journalists operate with a different set of loyalties and a different
set of
outcomes. Yet, there should be no contradiction under normal
circumstances
where the pursuit of peace and democracy deepening is concerned. This
should
ordinarily have been an opportunity for the ‘media’ to help our
democracy by
collectively rejecting the publication of pure falsehood.
As
recently as March 12, 2013 in the United Kingdom, detectives working
with the
Metropolitan Police’s Operation Elveden, an on-going
British police investigation into corrupt payments to public officials,
placed
two journalists under covert surveillance by police investigating
corruption
and bribery allegations against journalists. This process was considered
a
crowding out of press freedom with a number of people settling for an
open
invitation by the police for questioning, as was done in previous
invitations
with regards to Operation Weeting - covering
investigations of The
News of the World which led to numerous arrests, detentions and
eventual convictions.
The
developments at The News of the World,
which centre around the resort to illegal means to obtain and/or publish
otherwise dubiously obtained information led to the setting up of the Leveson
Inquiry, a judicial public inquiry into the culture, practices
and
ethics of the British press. The Inquiry published the Leveson Report in
November 2012, which reviewed the general culture and ethics of the
British
media, and made recommendations for a new, independent, body to replace
the
existing Press Complaints Commission, which would be recognised by the
state
through new laws. Some of the changes recommended include sweeping
measures
that will allow police officers to demand information from sources;
rights for
police to seize materials from the press, changes that may force
journalists to
reveal whistleblowers' identities; and other rule changes that may
define
freedom of speech. To show the extent of an ordered approach, part 2 of
the
inquiry has since been deferred until after criminal prosecutions
regarding
events at The News of the World are
concluded.
In
Nigeria, the place of our media is well regarded by the government and
its
freedom within the law, is regarded as sacred. The Nigerian media is
self-regulated
and is required to abide by defined codes of ethics. The incident with
the
Leadership newspapers is not an attempt by the government to muzzle a
critical
bridge in the societal value chain. Rather, it reflects the professional
gaps
that need to be bridged within the profession as the media continues to
play
its very crucial and necessary role in nation-building.
This
development therefore offers the media an opportunity for introspection,
one
that requires an emphasis on the responsibility of a media house as
regards
issues of ethics and professionalism; and extends in the main to how
such a
media house builds corporate governance rules to ensure that reckless,
unfounded and grossly misleading publications have no place in the
esteemed
profession and outputs from its stable.
Nigerians
fought so hard to end an era whereby serious attempts were made to
muzzle the
media and our recent history will attest to the heroic role played by
the media
in our emergent democracy. We intend for that to continue and welcome
unfettered contributions, investigations and accountability audit of
those
holding public office today and tomorrow.
What
must not be encouraged is voodoo
journalism or the deliberate and malicious attempt to use a medium
that is
designed to inform to now take on the inglorious task of being a
mouthpiece for
a narrow agenda based on disinformation, deliberate scaremongering,
civil
society baiting and the offer of media platform(s) to those hell-bent on
causing disharmony through well-woven conspiracies.
This government is
proud of its record on press freedom, its relationship with and
promotion of
access for the media and civil society. The publication of a spurious
document
and the alarmist approach to the routine invitation extended to the
Leadership
journalists should of itself provide proof of a choreographed attempt to
deliberately
cast the administration in bad light; especially given the synchronized
communications from the newspaper, the Action Congress of Nigeria, and
others.
Once
again, we urge the Nigerian public and the media to pay careful
attention to
those who parade themselves under different garbs and push forth
information
intended to subvert the cause of peace and order. The Nigerian
government
remains a committed advocate of a free but responsible media that can
and
should hold the government to account even as it seeks to educate and
inform
the citizenry for whom we are all responsible. This is the social
contract we
are all agreed to, for and on behalf of the Nigerian public.
Dr. Reuben Abati
is Special
Adviser (Media and Publicity) to President Goodluck Jonathan
April 10,
2013
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