New York, April 30, 2010—Four journalists who covered the recent dismissal of the electoral
commission chairman received anonymous death threats via text message on Wednesday,
according to CPJ interviews and news reports. The messages, sent from the same
number, said the reporters would meet the fate of three slain Nigerian
journalists.
“We will deal with
you soon. Remember Dele Giwa, Bayo Ohu, and Edo Ugbagwu?” the text messages
said, invoking three unsolved
Nigerian journalist murders, according to local reports. The
reporters who received the message were: Yusuf Ali of The Nation, Olusola Fabiyi of The
Punch, Chuks Okocha of ThisDay
and Gbenga Aruleba of Africa Independent Television (AIT).
The journalists received
identical messages after covering
Acting President Jonathan Goodluck’s decision to remove the chairman of the
Independent National Electoral Commission, Maurice Iwu.
Iwu denied any
involvement in the threats, news reports said. Some local journalists suggested
Iwu’s political enemies could have staged the threats in an attempt to smear
him.
The threats come just
days after three journalists were killed in two separate incidents. Unknown
gunmen shot private daily Nation
reporter Edo Sule
Ugbagwu at his home outside Lagos on Saturday, local journalists told CPJ. The
same day, rioters killed two journalists working for a local Christian
newspaper The Light Bearer, Deputy
Editor Nathan Dabak and reporter Sunday Gyang Bwede, in the restive city of
Jos, Plateau State.
“The text messages
mention of Giwa, Ohu and Ugbagwu is an ugly reminder that journalists have been
murdered in Nigeria with impunity,” said CPJ Africa Program Coordinator Tom Rhodes. “With three Nigerian journalists killed
recently, police must take no chances and provide full security to these
journalists.”
Aruleba,
a presenter on the political talk show “Focus
Nigeria” for AIT, received a warning Monday evening from a government
contact that his name was on a hit list, he told CPJ. Aruleba had produced
several programs critical of Iwu’s handling of the state elections.
National Police
Spokesman Emmanuel Ojukwu told CPJ that they are aware of the threats and
are investigating. In the Ugbagwu murder, Ojukwu said, police have detained some
suspects.