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Nigerian authorities raid Peoples Gazette Newspaper again; arrests editor, journalists

On July 22, armed policemen clamped down on the headquarters of online newspaper, Peoples Gazette, in Nigeria’s capital city, Abuja, arresting the outlet’s assistant managing editor, John Adenekan, two journalists and two administrative personnel.

The journalists arrested were Ameedat Adeyemi and Samuel Ogbu while the administrative personnel arrested were Grace Oke and Justina Tayani.

According to an account by the newspaper, five policemen took part in the raid and arrests in an operation which lasted for 30 minutes at the outlet’s headquarters at Utako District in Abuja. The episode reportedly happened when the staff members were preparing for an editorial meeting.

Adenekan was the first person taken away by the police officers at about 12:35 pm. The officers allegedly later returned to the office to arrest four other staff members.

Adeyemi, Tayani and Ogbu were summarily released. But the police did not free Adenekan and Oke until 5 pm, after bowing to pressure from Nigerians and civil rights groups, according to the newspaper’s account.

The police officers reportedly demanded to see the newspaper’s managing editor Samuel Ogundipe and a reporter Adefemola Akintade. They reportedly told Adenekan that their operation was over a story published by the outlet on June 23.

The story titled – ‘ICPC recovers multibillion-naira cash, Rolex watches stockpiled in ex-army chief Buratai’s Abuja property’ – detailed how an anti-graft agency, the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), raided a property belonging to Nigeria’s former chief of army staff, Tukur Buratai, and recovered cash and luxury items.

Both Ogundipe and Akintade, the journalist who broke the story, were unavailable during the operation, prompting the officers to arrest Adenekan and other staff members in their stead. The officers said they acted on a petition by Buratai.

The raid and arrests were greeted by nationwide outrage and condemnation, bringing to the memory of many Nigerians the dark era of military dictatorship when journalists were brutally harassed and media houses clamped upon.

Japheth Omojuwa, columnist and political commentator, said: “The idea of police arresting journalists without stating the reason(s) for their arrests should have been gone with the military era. The Nigerian system ditched military rule but has largely refused to do away with its norms and ways. A big shame.”

In a tweet condemning the police’s action, civil rights organisation, the Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP), condemned the arrests, threatening to take legal action if the editor and others were not released.

Another non-profit, Gavel, tweeted: “Invading @GazetteNGR newspaper’s head office to arrest an editor & other staff members is yet another attempt to gag journalism in the country.”

Ogundipe, Peoples Gazette managing editor, recalled that the newspaper has faced several attacks aimed at intimidating its journalists since its inception in September 2020, including the restriction of access to its website in January 2021 and the invasion of the same head office in January 2022 by the National Intelligence Agency (NIA).

“[President] Muhammadu Buhari may cry about what and what shouldn’t be his legacy, but this unwarranted onslaught on our journalists today, one of many we have suffered since we launched PG [Peoples Gazette] in September 2020, will forever live in infamy for his despotic regime,” Ogundipe said.

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) reported the two previous attacks mentioned by the Editor. On January 26, 2021, the authorities blocked access to the news website on the four major mobile internet providers in Nigeria, namely MTN, Glo, Airtel, and 9mobile. Consequently, the site could be assessed only via Wi-Fi, foreign mobile internet providers, and a virtual private network. To circumvent the blocking, the Peoples Gazette was relaunched as GazetteNGR.

“We launched Peoples Gazette on September 25, 2020. But because of the blocking, we lost all our digital footprints on Google between September and January. Our site ranked between 228 and 234 on Alexa ranking prior to our site’s blocking,” the news outlet’s managing editor, Samuel Ogundipe, told MFWA back then.

A year after blocking access to the Peoples Gazette, the authorities struck again. Four officers of the National Intelligence Agency (NIA) stormed the head office of the news website in Abuja on January 10, 2022. They demanded the sources of a confidential memo which was the basis of a report published by the online media. They also requested to see the Managing Editor, Samuel Ogundipe, as well as Hillary Essien, the alleged writer of the security-related stories published in December 2021.

The latest raid on the offices of the Peoples Gazette is the second in seven months and establishes a pattern of harassment and intimidation of the newspaper and its staff.

The MFWA condemns the raid on the Peoples Gazette office and the arrest of its editor, journalists and other staff. The police’s action is a direct attack on press freedom which is guaranteed by Section 39 of the Nigerian Constitution and other regional and international conventions. The authorities should act swiftly to reverse this ugly trend and allow the Peoples Gazette to work without any more harassment.

Next Generation Investigative Journalism Fellowship: 13 young journalists selected from 3 countries

After a competitive selection process, 13 young journalists have made it to the 2022 edition of the Next Generation Investigative Journalism Fellowship (NGIJ) hosted by the Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA). The fellows, made up of seven females and six males, are from Liberia, Ghana and Sierra Leone.

The Fellowship is a new initiative by the MFWA to promote public interest, accountability journalism in West Africa through mentorship and training of young promising journalism graduates. It is also aimed at bolstering quality journalism that advances transparency and accountability in governance, and the promotion of human rights.

Under the Fellowship, the fellows will be hosted in Ghana for a comprehensive five-month mentorship with Fact-Check Ghana and The Fourth Estate, both being MFWA’s public interest and accountability journalism projects made up of seasoned journalists. They will receive intensive practical training to be able to conduct critical, high-quality, fact-based and in-depth reporting towards improving lives and promoting good governance through journalism excellence. Fellows will also be supported to produce compelling investigative and/or fact-checking reports. Each Fellow will deliver at least one significant report by end of the Fellowship and will receive a Certificate of Honour upon successful completion of the fellowship.

The MFWA launched the maiden edition of the NGIJ in 2021 which saw a cohort of 10 young journalists from Ghana participating in the Fellowship. This report, for example, captures a synopsis of some of the compelling stories produced and published by the first Cohort of Fellows holding authorities to account in the provision of basic amenities such as water, health facilities etc.

The 2022 edition received over 100 applications from Liberia, Ghana and Sierra Leone. Fellows were recruited through a competitive selection process including aptitude tests and interviews. This year’s Fellowship is supported by theUnited States Embassy in Ghana and the Dutch Foreign Ministry (through the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands).

Below is the list of the 2022 Fellows:

    1. Forgbe Kloh -Liberia
    2. Victor Jones – Sierra Leone
    3. Marian Bangura -Sierra Leone
    4. Linda Essilfie- Nyame – Ghana
    5. Shadrack Odame -Ghana
    6. Thelma Amedeku-Ghana
    7. Philip Teye- Ghana
    8. Salifu Ayamdoo – Ghana
    9. Sedem Kwasigah- Ghana
    10. Norah Kwami- Ghana
    11. Diana Boakyewaa Amoako- Ghana
    12. Edmund Agyeman-Ghana
    13. Victoria Enyonam Adonu- Ghana

You may also want to read:

MFWA outdoors first cohort of investigative journalists

Becoming the next generation investigative journalist

Here’s how stories by MFWA’s journalism fellows are holding authorities to account in Ghana

Wearing the armour of the bold & courageous in journalism, here I come

Prominent Burkinabé journalist threatened in viral audio

Trial has begun in Ouagadougou of a 35-year-old trader suspected to have issued threats in a viral audio against one of Burkina Faso’s prominent journalists, Ahmed Newton Barry.

The trader, whose name has not been revealed, appeared in court on July 15, 2022 on charges of “defamation, public insults, incitement to violence and destruction of private property through social networks,” according to the country’s Cybercrime Unit (Brigade Centrale de Lutte contre la Cybercriminalité – BCLCC).

In June 2022, the said audio which contained hate speech circulated online in Burkina Faso. In the audio, the suspect called on people to reduce to shambles the residence of Newton Ahmed Barry.

The voice in the viral audio clip, produced in the local language “Mooré,” attacked Barry and called on people “to burn down his house, completely demolish it, collect all the rubble and clear the land,” reports say. The speaker in the audio also described the journalist as a “terrorist who does not deserve to live in Burkina Faso.”

Ahmed Barry contacted Burkina Faso’s public prosecutor, Harouna Yoda, to report the death threat. The matter was subsequently reported to the country’s Cybercrime Unit. The BCLCC was able to arrest the suspect, who admitted that he produced the audio.

Barry is a former editor-in-chief of the private investigative newspaper, l’Evènement, and one-time Commissioner for Burkina Faso’s Independent Electoral Commission (CENI). Well-known for his outspoken views on Burkina Faso’s socio-political situation, Barry is a regular voice on many media platforms in the country.

The journalist is believed to have been targeted because of his stand on the cooperation between the Malian government and a Russian mercenary company. He explained that he had reservations on how beneficial the Russia-Mali collaboration to fight terrorism would be for both countries. The journalist made the comment, on May 19, 2022, during “Surface de vérité,” a live show of the privately-owned TV station BF1.

Barry told the MFWA that the author of the threat explained to the BCLCC that he was part of a pro-Russia WhatsApp group in Burkina Faso, and that members of the group were angered by what Barry had said, interpreting it as his (Barry’s) apparent dislike for Russia.

The content of the said audio caused outrage and indignation in the country. The Professional Media Organisations (OPM), thus, issued a statement on June 20, 2022 to condemn the threat.

“The Professional Media Organisations strongly condemn this extremist, gratuitous and unnecessary malice towards Mr. Barry”. The OPMs “call on the authorities of Burkina Faso to urgently ensure the safety of Newton Ahmed Barry,” the statement read.

Meanwhile, the case was adjourned to July 22, 2022, as the accused did not have any lawyer to defend him.

The journalist said that he does not really feel safe as the environment in the country is hostile, and anyone could become an enemy over night because of his/her opinions.

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) strongly condemns the threat and public incitement against journalist Ahmed Barry. While we welcome the commencement of legal proceedings against the author of the threat, we call on the authorities of Burkina Faso to take steps to guarantee the safety of the journalist.

MFWA, Partners express solidarity with Burkina Faso and Mali over recent terrorist attacks

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) and its national partners, Centre National de Presse Norbert Zongo of Burkina Faso (CNP-NZ) and the Maison de la Presse du Mali (MP), have in a joint statement expressed their solidarity and sympathy to the people of Mali and Burkina Faso who have experienced recent terrorist attacks.

The three media organisations condemned the attacks that occurred between July 2 and 4, 2022, in the communities of Namissiguima and Bourasso in Burkina Faso during which about 30 people lost their lives. They also expressed outrage at the terrorist attacks that took place between June 18 and 19, 2022 in Bandiagara, Mali, killing about 100 people.

The organisations further expressed their anxiety about the devastating toll of violent extremism, its spread in the West Africa region and the threat it poses to press freedom and sustainability in the sub-region.

The MFWA, CNP-NZ and Maison de la Presse urged all ECOWAS Member States to support the governments of Mali and Burkina Faso in their efforts to counter terrorism.

To read the full joint statement, please click here.

Nigerian government refuses to compensate journalist a year after ECOWAS court ruling

Despite a judgement of the ECOWAS Court of Justice on  July 9 ,2021, ordering the Nigerian government to compensate journalist Agba Jalingo for his prolonged detention and mistreatment in custody, the journalist has not been paid.

“They haven’t paid the compensation. They haven’t paid anything,” Jalingo told the MFWA

Arrest and trial

Jalingo, who is the publisher of CrossRiverWatch, a privately owned news website, was arrested on  August 22 2019 over a report alleging that Ben Ayade, the governor of Cross River state in south-southern Nigeria, diverted NGN500 million (US$1.2 million) belonging to the state’s coffers.

On August 30 2019, federal authorities in Cross River state, under Section 24(b) of the Cybercrime Act, charged the journalist with breach of peace and treason for his writing and social media posts against the governor.

According to the charge sheet, the disturbance charges stem from a July 12, 2019 article published on CrossRiverWatch that alleged corruption involving Ayade and the Cross River Micro Finance Bank.

The treason charges alleged that, Jalingo agitated for Ayade’s removal through “various malicious publications” on CrossRiverWatch and social media.

Jalingo was thereafter remanded in custody in Calabar but was released on bail on February 17, 2020, after spending 179 days in detention.

After his release at the time, the journalist told reporters that his jailers made life unbearable for him. He said at a period in the prison, his two hands were chained to a deep freezer for more than two weeks.

The ruling

In response to a suit filed on the journalist’s behalf by a civil rights group, Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP), the ECOWAS court in Nigeria’s capital Abuja ordered the Nigerian government to pay Jalingo a sum of NGN30 million (approximately US$73,000) as compensation for dehumanising him while in detention.

The court ruled at the time that Jalingo was illegally arrested, detained, tortured, brutalised and dehumanised.

“This is against international human rights treaties, particularly the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights to which Nigeria is a state party. The Nigerian government has flouted the provisions of these treaties on international fair trial standards,” the court said.

“For these reasons, on the claims of compensation for ill-treatment and torture, SERAP has been able to establish the claims. We condemn the Nigerian government for these acts and hereby award compensation of NGN30 million to Mr Jalingo for violations of his human rights. The Nigerian government must comply with the order of the court within three months, and file a process to this court to this effect.”

However, the Nigerian government has despised the ECOWAS court’s order to compensate Jalingo within three months of the judgement.

Jalingo told the MFWA that his lawyers are still in court to enforce the judgement.

“My lawyers have filed for enforcement of the [ECOWAS] court judgement at the Cross River State High Court. It is on record that they are owing me. Anytime they want to pay me, they should pay,” the journalist said.

He, however, said the monetary compensation was not as important as the acquittal of all the charges levelled against him.

Justice comes through

On 22 March 2022, a federal high court in Calabar, the capital of Cross River state, dismissed the terrorism, treasonable felony, and cybercrime charges against Jalingo.

The judge, Ijeoma Ojukwu, dismissed the charges after the Cross River state government withdrew the charges against him, according to a report published by CrossRiverWatch.

Jalingo’s lawyer, Adeyinka Olumide-Fusika, commended the Cross River state attorney general for withdrawing the charges against his client.

“We are happy that our harassment has ended,” said Olumide-Fusika, who was accompanied by two other lawyers, Baba Isa and Kehole Enya.

Reacting, Jalingo said he is glad that the court has exonerated him of all charges.

“The court has told the governor and the police that arrested me that what they did was wrong. The court said the trial was a waste of its time. These are the things that gladden my heart,” he told MFWA.

Jalingo stressed that in a shrinking democratic space, it was time for journalists to be united and push back at those using power to silence those who stand for truth.

“Despite the risk that comes with this, we must not relent, which is why the work that media rights organisations [like the MFWA] are doing to protect journalists and look out for them is very important,” he said.

MFWA hails the Cross River high court ruling exonerating Jalingo from all the charges against him and demands that the government pay the NGN30 million compensation awarded to the journalist by the ECOWAS court.

Nigerian authorities should also desist from arbitrarily arresting and illegally detaining journalists as the constitution gives them the freedom to do their job without fear or favour.

MFWA, Partners launch Media Support Project in Guinea Bissau

The Media Foundation for West Africa and its partner in Guinea Bissau, Sindicato De Jornalistas e Tecnicos De Comunicacao Social Guinea Bissau (SINJOTECS), will on Friday, July 15, 2022, officially launch a three-year project titled Promoting media freedom and access to quality information in Guinea Bissau. The project is funded by EU (Guinea Bissau).

The project seeks to strengthen the capacity of media actors to monitor and document violations of media and freedom of expression rights and enhance the capacity of key state actors on human and media rights issues. The project will also increase the capacity of media organisations and practitioners to produce quality, fact-based and ethical content, to help counter messages of radicalization and violent extremism.

Key activities under the project include training workshops on media ethics, human rights and freedom of expression (including digital rights); development of institutional documents such as editorial, communication and fundraising policies for media actors; monitoring and reporting of the state of media freedom and freedom of expression in the country. Media actors in Bissau will also benefit from the creation and operationalisation of a common website for the publication of issues of freedom of expression violations and significant developments affecting the media sector in the country.

To improve media-security relations in Guinea Bissau, the project will work with key state actors such as the Police, Military and the Human Rights Commission to jointly develop a National Comprehensive framework on safety of journalists.

Already, baseline studies and inception meetings have been held with key media actors – Sindicato dos Jornalistas e Técnicos de Comunicação Social (SINJOTECS), Rede Nacional das Rádios Comunitárias (RENARC), Associação de Mulheres Profissionais dos Órgãos de Comunicação Social (AMPROCS), and Ordem de Jornalistas da Guiné-Bissau (OJGB); state actors – the Police, Military and the Human Rights Commission; and some influential media organisations in the country.

The official project launch will be performed by the Minister of Communication who will also be the keynote speaker and the EU Ambassador to Guinea Bissau will make a statement.  The project launch will bring together representatives from government, civil society, media, political parties, religious bodies and international agencies.

Bissau, July 12, 2022

For more information and interviews contact the following:

Abigail Larbi-Odei

Project Manager

Tel: +233-244867047

 

Daisy Prempeh

Project coordinator

Tel: +245-966182468

 

Ivanildo Paulo Bodjam

Project Assistant

Tel: +245-969-293001/+245-955341198

********************************************

A MFWA, parceiros lançam projeto de apoio aos Meios de comunicação social na Guiné Bissau

A Fundação dos Media para a África Ocidental e o seu parceiro na Guiné-Bissau, Sindicato de Jornalistas e Técnicos de Comunicação Social da Guiné-Bissau (SINJOTECS), lançarão oficialmente na sexta-feira, 15 de julho de 2022, um projeto de três anos intitulado Promover a liberdade dos media e acesso à informação de qualidade na Guiné-Bissau. O projeto é financiado pela UE (Guiné Bissau).

O projeto visa reforçar a capacidade dos atores dos meios de comunicação para monitorizar e documentar as violações dos direitos dos meios de comunicação e da liberdade de expressão e aumentar a capacidade dos principais atores estatais em questões de direitos humanos e dos meios de comunicação. O projeto irá também aumentar a capacidade das organizações e profissionais dos meios de comunicação social para produzir conteúdos de qualidade, baseados em fatos e éticos, para ajudar a contrariar mensagens de radicalização e extremismo violento.

As principais atividades do projeto incluem ateliers de formação sobre ética dos media, direitos humanos e liberdade de expressão (incluindo direitos digitais); desenvolvimento de documentos institucionais tais como políticas editoriais, de comunicação e de angariação de fundos para atores dos media; monitorização e informação sobre o estado da liberdade dos media e da liberdade de expressão no país. Os atores dos meios de comunicação social em Bissau também beneficiarão da criação e operacionalização de um website comum para a publicação de questões de violação da liberdade de expressão e de desenvolvimentos significativos que afetem o sector dos meios de comunicação social no país.

Para melhorar as relações de segurança dos meios de comunicação social na Guiné-Bissau, o projeto trabalhará com atores-chave do Estado, tais como a Polícia, Militares e a Comissão de Direitos Humanos, para desenvolver conjuntamente um quadro nacional abrangente sobre segurança dos jornalistas.

Já foram realizados estudos de base e ateliers de lançamento com atores-chave dos meios de comunicação – Sindicato dos Jornalistas e Técnicos de Comunicação Social (SINJOTECS), Rede Nacional das Rádios Comunitárias (RENARC), Associação de Mulheres Profissionais dos Órgãos de Comunicação Social (AMPROCS), e Ordem de Jornalistas da Guiné-Bissau (OJGB); atores estatais – a Polícia, as Forças Armadas e a Comissão dos Direitos Humanos; e alguns órgãos de comunicação social influentes no país.

O lançamento oficial do projeto será realizado pelo Ministro da Comunicação que será também o orador principal. O Embaixador da UE na Guiné-Bissau fará uma declaração.  O lançamento do projeto reunirá representantes do governo, sociedade civil, meios de comunicação social, partidos políticos, organismos religiosos e agências internacionais.

Bissau, 12 de julho de 2022

Para mais informações e entrevistas, contactar o seguinte:

Abigail Larbi-Odei

Gestora de projeto

Tel: +233-244867047

 

Daisy Prempeh

Coordenador do projeto

Tel: +245-966182468

 

Ivanildo Paulo Bodjam

Assistente de projeto

Tel: +245-969-293001/+245-955341198293001/+245-955341198

Clerk apologises to victim as Parliament begins investigation into MP’s assault on journalist

The Media Foundation for West Africa welcomes the intervention of the Sierra Leone Association of Journalists (SLAJ), which has led to the Clerk of Parliament issuing an apology to Abdulai Gbla, a journalist who was assaulted by a Member of Parliament.

A statement dated July 6 and signed by SLAJ’s National Secretary General, Alhaji Manika Kamara, announced the development, adding that the leadership of Parliament have recommended an investigation into the assault.

On June 28, 2022, a Member of Parliament, Hon. Abdul Muniru Lansana, attacked Abdulai Gbla, the Chief Executive Officer of Gbla & Co Multimedia, operators of Gbla TV online, and a member of the Sierra Leone Parliamentary Press Gallery. The incident occurred inside the National Assembly. The journalist was filming a scuffle between some MPs from the majority and minority sides of the House after official parliamentary proceedings had closed when Abdul Muniru Lansana ordered him to stop. When Gbla ignored the order, the MP, representing Constituency 121 in the Western Area, pushed and shoved him, almost sending him to the floor. Not satisfied, the angry lawmaker knocked the journalist’s gadget (Samsung Galaxy Note 20 ULTRA) onto the floor. Fortunately, the gadget was not damaged and the journalist was rescued and escorted out by other MPs present.

In a complaint letter to SLAJ on the same day, Gbla said Hon. Muniru Lansana has held a grudge against him for a year now after he did a story about the MP’s clash with commercial motor bicycle riders over a piece of land which the latter were using as their terminal.

Following the complaint, the executive of SLAJ led by President Ahmed Sahid Nasralla, on Tuesday, July 5, 2022, held a meeting with the Clerk of Parliament, Hon Umarr Paran Tarawally, in his office at the premises of Parliament in a bid to amicably resolve the case. At the beginning of the meeting, the Clerk, on behalf of the MP, apologised to the journalist for what he described as “the unfortunate incident.”

The SLAJ statement said “Parliament will constitute a committee to investigate the incident and make recommendations. The committee shall include journalist Abdulai Gbla and a representative from the SLAJ Executive. The committee shall conclude their investigation by Friday 15th July 2022 and would decide on the next steps.”

“I appreciate the fact that SLAJ took the matter up seriously with Parliament, and Parliament has considered making an apology. I think that in itself is good. I appreciate the fact that Parliament has reached out to me. The fact that Parliament wants to mount an investigation is also good because we need to explain ourselves: what happened, what led the MP to do that to me. Maybe he needs to explain. And after everything, I want to see the recommendations,” Gbla told the MFWA via a messaging app.

The MFWA salutes the move by the SLAJ to get the matter resolved and consider as progressive the apology rendered by the Clerk of Parliament over the incident. We also welcome the decision to investigate the incident and urge SLAJ and the authorities to pursue matter to its logical conclusion.

MFWA congratulates President Umaro Mokhtar Sissoco Embaló on appointment as ECOWAS Chair

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) extends warm congratulations to President Umaro Mokhtar Sissoco Embaló on his appointment as Chair of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).

President Embaló was unanimously elected during the 61st Ordinary Session of the Authority of Heads of State and Governments held in Accra on July 3, 2022. The Bissau Guinean President takes over the ECOWAS Chair from Nana Addo-Dankwa Akufo-Addo of Ghana who served two terms.

Umaro Sissoco Embaló became President of Guinea-Bissau on February 27, 2020, after the electoral commission confirmed him winner of the country’s December 29, 2021, presidential run-off against Domingos Simoes Pereira.

His unanimous election as ECOWAS Chair is an endorsement of his stewardship of Guinea Bissau over the past two and half years and a manifestation of the confidence of his peers in his ability to steer the sub-regional bloc to peace, stability and economic development.

President Embaló takes over as ECOWAS Chair at a particularly challenging time when the West African region, especially the Sahel zone of Northern Nigeria, Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso, continues to battle jihadist insurgency with the threat of a spill-over into Togo and Benin. The sub-region has also witnessed a roll-back of democracy with Guinea, Mali and Burkina Faso recording military coups. The new ECOWAS boss himself survived an abortive but bloody coup attempt on February 1, 2022.

The precarious security situation in the Sahel zones, coupled with the military take-overs, has affected media freedom and restricted civic space in West Africa.

As West Africa’s leading free expression and press freedom advocacy organisation, we are happy to know that President Embaló is prioritising peace and stability during his tenure as the new Chair of ECOWAS. We are confident in his commitment and ability to deliver on his promise and remain ready to work with his Administration to promote peace and democracy in order to foster a more conducive environment for media practice across West Africa.

The Media Foundation for West Africa and its partners wish President Embaló the very best and urge all stakeholders to support him as he embarks on the arduous mission of leading the sub-regional bloc to peace, democracy and stability.

MFWA joins NUJ, IPC to demand an end to harassment of publisher, reporter

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) welcomes the release on bail of Haruna Mohammed, the publisher of WikkiTimes, and Idris Kamal, a reporter of the online newspaper, and demands that charges against the two are dropped.

The two journalists gained a measure of freedom on June 29, 2022, when a Bauchi Magistrate Court 1 presided by Ahmed Baba Sekoni Abdulfatai granted them bail. The previous day, the Court had granted leave for the two to be held in custody.

The journalists were detained on June 27, when they honoured an invitation from the Bauchi State Criminal Investigation and Intelligence Department (SCIID). The police detained the editor and his reporter for about 10 hours after taking their statements. As if their ten-hour ordeal was not enough, the journalists were summoned back to the police station the following day June 28, and processed for court on charges of criminal conspiracy, defamation of character and cyber stalking. The court granted permission for the journalists to be kept in custody before granting them bail the next day.

The ordeal of the WikkiTimes journalists followed a petition by Yakubu Shehu Abdullahi, a member of the House of Representatives for the Bauchi Federal Constituency, concerning a recent report by the newspaper.  In the said report published on May 18, 2022, the newspaper revealed that the late Chairman of the All Progressive People’s Congress (APC) in Bauchi Local Government, Hussaini Musa Gwaba, was assassinated. It explained that Mr Gwaba received a series of threats before his sudden death. The report also suggested that the petitioner, Yakubu Shehu Abdullai, saw the deceased as a rival and a threat to his future ambitions.

The detention and harassment of the journalists have been condemned by media rights organisations in Nigeria. In a statement signed by its Communications Officer, Toyin Ayoade, the International Press Centre (IPC), MFWA’s partner organization in Nigeria, said “it now behoves on the Police authorities in the State to ensure the safety of Mohammed and Kamal.”

Quoting its Executive Director, Lanre Arogundade, the IPC said “journalists should not continue to be treated as endangered species in Nigeria, stating that in all circumstances the security agencies must always strive to toe the path of the rule of law in handling complaints or petitions against journalists and other media professionals, just as they should normally do for all citizens.”

The Bauchi State Council of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) has also strongly condemned the police treatment of the journalists. A statement jointly signed by the State NUJ Chairman Umar Sa’idu and the Secretary, Isah Garba, expressed commitment to professional standards and rejected all acts of repression.

“However, the Union will not tolerate a situation where politicians who have issues to hide use security operatives to perpetrate acts of impunity against Journalists. It is in this respect that we condemn in the strongest of terms the arrest and detention of the two Journalists in question because of their professional work” the statement read in part.

The MFWA joins the NUJ and its partner organisation in Nigeria to condemn the harassment of the two journalists and demand that all charges against them are dropped.

MFWA condemns violent scenes at ‘Arise Ghana’ protests, demands audit

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) condemns the various acts of violence that marred the anti-government demonstration in Accra on June 28, 2022, and demands a total audit of the events to forestall future recurrence.

A political pressure group, Arise Ghana, called Ghanaians into the streets for a two-day protest against economic hardships, perceived corruption, and misplaced priorities on the part of government. However, the protest descended into violence with police using tear gas and firing warning shots to disperse the protesters some of whom also threw stones at the security agents. Television footages showed a number of protesters wounded while the police service also paraded a couple of its officers who were injured. Some 12 police officers were sent to the Police Hospital to be treated for various injuries, according to the police. The police also announced having picked up a protester who was wielding a pistol. It later issued a statement in which it said 29 protesters were arrested for various offenses under Section 3 of Ghana’s Public Order Act (491).

The organisers, on the other hand, accuse the government of planting agents provocateurs in the midst of the protesters to create trouble and provide a pretext for the crackdown. At a press conference later in the day, the organisers said they had not planned any violence and no protester was armed.

“We did not go there with sticks, we did not go there with stones,” said Sammy Gyamfi, who is Director of Communication for the opposition National Democratic Congress and a leading figure in the Arise Ghana protests.

Be that as it may, the MFWA finds the violent acts distasteful and uncivil. It is a failure of leadership and vigilance on the part of the organisers which, fortunately, was not be repeated on the second day of the protests.

The organisers of the Arise Ghana protest had earlier planned to picket at the premises of the Jubilee House, the seat of government. They had also scheduled the march to travel deep into the night, but the police opposed the move.

The security service eventually secured an Accra High Court judgement directing the protestors to commence their march at the Obra Spot and end it at Independence Square, two popular landmarks in the capital. The court also rejected the late night end to the protest.

While the MFWA welcomes the relatively more peaceful and orderly second day of the Arise Ghana marches, it should not eclipse the nasty scenes of the first day and the need for accountability on both sides. The protesters stepped out of line, but the police response was not quite convincing. We, therefore, call on the organisers to take precautions against protester excesses in the future and urge the police not to allow personal grievances to influence their handling of the protesters who were arrested, but rather ensure that the detainees’ rights are respected. Finally, we call for a thorough audit of the protest to establish the causes of the chaos that characterised the protests.

Niger: Thieves break into media house, carry away equipment

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) condemns in no uncertain terms, the stealing and destruction of equipment belonging to La Source newspaper by thugs who burglarized the office of the media outlet, and urges authorities to apprehend the perpetrators.

On June 19, 2022, some unknown individuals broke into the premises of La Source, located at the National Stadium of Niamey. They took away one of the laptops that is used to manage the newspaper’s digital platforms and damaged another computer as they tried to remove the hard disk drive.

“The newspaper was robbed last Sunday, June 19, 2022. They stole equipment and the laptop on which we work. They broke the screen of the second laptop and damaged it in an attempt to remove its hard disk drive,” Amani Mounkaila Boureima, journalist and chief-editor of the newspaper, told the MFWA in a phone conversation.

Amani Mounkaila Boureima lodged a complaint with the police who say they have opened investigations into the incident. The targeting of laptops and hard disc suggests the attack was intended to collect some suspected information or prevent the publication of same.

However, the editor of the newspaper has no such suspicions. He says he could not identify any underlying reasons behind the act and thinks that it is an isolated case, being the first of such incident his outfit has experienced.

“The police are still investigating the matter. We report very little on political issues. I do not believe the robbery has anything to do with my work. We did not deem it necessary to take photographs or to report the incident to our associations. We do not believe that we have enemies, that is why we believe that it is a petty act of thuggery where people took advantage of the lack of vigilance of the guards to break into the offices. It is a heinous crime,” Amani Mounkaila Boureima added.

The MFWA reiterates its Strong condemnation of the crime on the newspaper La Source and calls on authorities to investigate the matter, arrest the culprits and establish their motive.

Meanwhile, as we solidarize with the news outlet, we call on them to put in more efforts to improve security at their premises and secure back-up for their data.

Guinea: Politician assaults show host during live broadcast

The Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA) is dismayed by the assault on journalist Ahmed Camara of Radio Espace by a former Member of Parliament and demands appropriate sanctions against the perpetrator who disrupted a live broadcast.

On June 15, 2022, ex-MP Aboubacar Soumah, who’s currently the president of the political party Guinee pour la Démocratie et l’Equité (GDE), was a guest in the studio of Radio Espace FM based in Conakry during the highly popular socio-political discussion programme “Les Grandes Gueules”.

Camara, a co-host of the programme, alleged that the ex-MP was one of the politicians who supported former President Alpha Conde’s eventually successful push for a third term in office.  After a vehement denial by the politician, the producer of the programme played an audio in which he (the politician) was heard endorsing the controversial third term agenda.

“I think that if the situation of the country remains at this level of cacophony, of political ethnicization, even if it is a fourth term that is needed or even a tenth term that is needed for our current leaders to harmonize, to pacify, to unite Guineans, I, Aboubacar Soumah, am for it,” the politician was heard saying in the audio.

“This is the proof that you supported the third mandate,” said Ahmed Camara, after the audio was played.

Embarrassed by the evidence, Soumah began shouting and protesting that his words had been taken out of context. Before Camara could challenge his claim, his grumpy guest pounced on him. He grabbed the journalist by the collar, damaging his shirt in the process. The timely intervention of the journalists present in the studio saved Camara from further assault by the politician who was later escorted out of the studio. The altercation disrupted the programme for about five minutes.

Meanwhile, a complaint has been lodged against Aboubacar Soumah at the Tribunal at Mafanco. The Public Prosecutor of the Mafanco tribunal located in the municipality where Radio Espace FM is based has ordered the police officers to arrest the politician.

The MFWA welcomes the prompt reaction of the authorities, and we strongly urge them not to let this aggression be forgotten.  They must ensure that the perpetrator of this attack is punished in order to deter further press freedom violations.