Dangers of silencing the media
Dangers
of silencing the media
By Emmanuel Okogba
By Tonnie
Iredia
In times of crisis, all groups in society are encouraged to come
up with what they understand to be the contentious issues at stake. The
expectation is that an aggregation of all suchtouchy issues raised by different
groups might help to set an agenda for dialogue which is always the best
strategy for conflict resolution. Here, there is wisdom in recognizing that by
virtue of the heterogeneous nature of Nigeria, our crisis cannot but have
several dimensions with each group framing the crisis from a particular prism.
But then, not much is achievable when some opinion moulders
(quite often self-appointed) subject other people’s articulation to a
self-servingdebate. For example, if the Southern Governors see open grazing as
their region’s most acute problem, the best any patriot can do is to suggest
what can solve that problem. To quarrel with the region’s perspective can only
exacerbate crisis. It is even more fruitless when the narrative is reduced to
finding fault with the method a group used to present what aches her. Whether
through a letter to the President or a communique or even a peaceful protest;
let each one bring her perspective to the general table with an open mind to
resolve our common problem which has been on the increase in the recent past.
Why have outspoken people like
former President Olusegun Obasanjo stopped talking about our challenges? Could
it be that they have been deterred by those who always leave the message to
attack the messenger? Indeed, some Nigerians have become experts in pointing out
the contributions of critics to the problem being criticised. This
observation appears to represent the comment of the Senate President, Ahmed
Lawan that Governors who are always pointing accusing fingers at the federal
government should practice what they preach.
In fact, from where did governors who have refused to carry out
devolution of powers with local governments develop the moral courage to demand
the same devolution of powers from the federal government? Can governors who
have refused to obey the constitutional provision of financial autonomy for the
judiciary be seen to be demanding more autonomy like state police from federal
authorities? Objective answers to these questions would easily show that
Senator Lawan’s criticism enjoys ample logic. Interestingly, that’s where
it ends, because to use such arguments to indict our governors may not
exculpate the federal government from a more immediate if not greater blame.
Ordinary Nigerians must first be saved from bandits and
kidnappers before they can comprehend the struggle for power among politicians.
While governors should not be allowed to emasculate the local government and
the judiciary, such logic will be of no value to those killed through banditry
and kidnapping. What this suggests is that to raise what the governors have
themselves not done well to validate any lapses at the federal level benefits
no one. Our politicians must therefore learn to avoid this narrative which
makes two wrongs to become right. How to stop this tendency of defending the
indefensible which is also not in anyone’s interest is one major problem that
is begging for attention in our clime. If it is well handled, the most
intractable problems would be illuminated.
The sector of our society that
can best underscore this existential threat and place it in the front burner of
public discourse is the media – a virile societal organ that may soon become
feeble if society continues to quietly intimidate her. A few days ago, the
Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) rose against the National Broadcasting
Commission (NBC) for its new posture of acting not as a regulator but as a
‘strangulator’ of the broadcast media especially those that have for some time
now become the only voice of the voiceless. The latest bone of contention is an
interview granted by Channels Television to an official of the proscribed
Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB) which the NBC found inciting.
In fairness to the NBC, it surprisingly for once, followed some
praiseworthy steps of drawing attention to the infraction and giving the
station a chance to defend herself instead of its usual procedure of instant
verdict and punishment. This column which had been in the forefront of
criticising the NBC was at the verge of applauding the regulator for reverting
tothe old practice of natural justice when we heard that Channels TV was still
asked to pay a fine of N5million for the said infraction. This huge sentence
was reportedly arrived at after the station pleaded that what transpired was an
unintended consequence of programming.
It is hard to believe that the
punitive outcome was the handiwork of the NBC which is itself made up of
broadcasters that are capable of dissecting the mental elements of a
presenter’s intention to commit crime. Channels TV has no doubt become a
well-known credible medium just as the philosophy, objective and format of the
offensive slot – ‘Politics Today’ leaves minimum room for mischief. The
impression one gets is that the NBC now has some inexplicable thought process
that compels her to inflict capital punishment on innocent mistake.
It is a dangerous posture which seems to suggest that
anti-government forces must never get any coverage whatsoever. The danger in
that posture is that if the medium in the future gets content from such
proscribed source that can help people escape from disaster, her first impulse
would be self-preservation that would make her follow the subsisting inflexible
broadcast regulatory provisions to the detriment of society.
In addition, to demobilize the conventional media in today’s
world of technology is a wasted effort because what the effort seeks to hide
would not only be on every digital platform of the social media, it would also
be instantly distributed and repeated severally beyond official contemplation.
On the other hand, the public organs of mass communication cannot do much for
government because they are too subjected to maximum official control to have
initiative or be creative.
Instead, they have become so incredible that some people no
longer watch or listen to them while others that still patronize them are
constantly propelled to doubt their contents. The greater danger is that when
government now has an important public message, it would be hard to find anyone
to communicate it to which is a major blow to public enlightenment.
Besides, when the media is so
weakened that it cannot generate real news except propaganda and common-place
press releases, the task of holding government accountable to the people which
Section 22 of our constitution assigned to the media becomes superfluous
thereby leaving impunity and undemocratic practices unchecked. And for a long
time to come, no opposition party will win election as no medium will have the
courage to disagree or report any event not sanctioned by the ruling party.
The way forward is for the Nigerian media to be encouraged to
objectively criticise any public policy including the refusal to allow local
government autonomy as well as financial autonomy for the judiciary. It must
also not be dissuaded from publicising the failure to guarantee the security of
lives and property in the country. On the part of the broadcast media in
particular, one can only hope that it can resurrect the right vision to serve
as the nation’s gatekeeper especially as its administrative regulator is
empowered to place every infraction in a special class of cases which require
no proof of evidence.
Nigeria news paper
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