24th August, 2014
PRESS RELEASE:
HARRASSMENT
OF DAILY TRUST JOURNALISTS BY THE MILITARY: THREAT TO FREE SPEECH
Soldiers on Thursday invaded the Maiduguri offices of the Daily
Trust after a story published by the paper on Wednesday alleged that Nigerian
soldiers had refused orders to fight Boko Haram militants with their bare
hands. Two managers of the paper, Jamilu Aliyu and Aminu Ado were detained for
one hour at the army headquarters in Maiduguri.
The military later released a statement that said the Daily
Trust should retract the story and, in the future, contact the military for any
story on the army or national security or face sanctions. However, Nigerian
Army spokesperson has since denied that any sanction was being planned against
the newspaper.
The Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) calls on the Nigerian military
to regard cordial relation with the press as crucial in the war against
insurgents. It is high time
the Nigerian military realized that any war at all has three fronts: the battle
field per se, public opinion at home and the opinion of the international
community. It is only in the first front that weapons and soldiers feature. The
rest is in the hands of the press.
Soldiers may win
battles, it is the press that wins the war for them or vice versa. Of course
the attitude of the press is largely informed by the military’s professional or
unprofessional prosecution of the war.
The storming of Daily Trust office in Maiduguri falls in the
category of the unprofessional. It was also unjust because Daily Trust was not
the primary source of the report as it was first broadcast by the British
Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). MURIC strongly condemns this invasion. It is an undeniable symptom of dictatorship
of the left. It was barbaric, unethical and in bad taste.
For improved relations between the press and the military, we
suggest that future operations against insurgents should be conducted with the
embedding of journalists. This will conform with international best practices.
It is well known that journalists are often embedded in military convoys during
advances on enemy targets in civilized countries and we see no reason why the
Nigerian military cannot do it.
The fact that the two Daily Trust reporters who were arrested by
the army were told to stop criticizing the military speaks volumes. The
Nigerian military should realize that Gestapo tactics have become unpopular,
archaic and myopic.
Those who muzzle the
press have more than something to hide. It is sad that other democratic
institutions remain quiet when these atrocities are committed. The National
Assembly should wake up from its slumber because democracy cannot thrive where
the press is gagged.
MURIC calls on the Nigerian military to respect Allah-given and
fundamental rights of the press. Only thus can the freedom of the press be
guaranteed. As a civilian institution and the Fourth Estate of the Realm, the press
must be recognized by the military as a partner and not as an enemy or a rival.
The Nigerian press has assisted in enabling government to know
about problems facing the military particularly in the area of needs. It was
after the Nigerian press reported the problem of poor funding and crude
weaponry that the Federal Government rose to the occasion. The same reports
also enabled the international community to know the problems facing the
Nigerian Army.
Consequently, Western powers have donated several modern
equipments like bomb-detecting robots from the United States and jet bombers
from Britain. This reveals
that the Nigerian Army has started benefitting from the labour of the Nigerian
press. How then can one good turn deserve invasion and arrest?
MURIC gives kudos to the two brave journalists from the Daily
Trust. We urge them to regard the experience as part of the hazards of their
noble profession. We charge the Nigerian press in general to remain as solid as
the Rock of Gibraltar.
We call on the Nigerian
Union of Journalists (NUJ) to file a complaint on the constant intimidation of
its members before the presidency and the National Assembly. NUJ must be ready to sue the military
for these constant infringements if government fails to take any action on
their complaint.
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC)
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