CPJ calls on Nigerian president to improve press freedom

Bola Ahmed Adekunle Tinubu
President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria

Sent via email

Dear President Tinubu,

We at the Committee to Protect Journalists, an independent nongovernmental organization that defends press freedom globally, write to request that your administration take swift and deliberate actions to improve conditions for the press in Nigeria. As you mark three months in office, there is no better time to revitalize press freedom throughout the country.

We request that you ensure justice is delivered for attacks on the press and that you reform legislation and regulations to prevent the jailing and surveillance of journalists. We also urge you to ensure undisrupted access to the internet, online platforms, and news websites.

CPJ has documented consistent accounts of threats, harassment, and physical attacks by security officers, politicians, and their supporters against journalists on the job, including as they covered protests and elections. During this year’s presidential and state election period alone, CPJ documented intimidation attempts, physical attacks, or detentions of over 40 journalists.

Since 1992, CPJ has documented the killing of at least 22 journalists in Nigeria, as well as two others who are missing and presumed dead. At least 12 of these journalists are confirmed to have been killed in connection with their work. On June 21, a local court ordered the Nigerian police to pay 50 million naira (US$65,353) to the family of Alex Ogbu, an editor with the privately owned outlet Regent Africa Times, who police shot and killed in January 2020 while he covered protests in Abuja.

Similarly, in July 2021, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Court ordered the Nigerian government to compensate journalist Agba Jalingo 30 million naira (US$39,211) for his prolonged detention and mistreatment in custody. Neither payment has been fulfilled by authorities.

CPJ has for years documented repeated cases of authorities prosecuting journalists under laws that criminalize journalism. These include:

Furthermore, Nigeria’s communications regulations permit police and a range of other authorities to obtain telecom subscribers’ call data, including the location, time, and numbers used in regular phone calls and SMS messages, without a judicial warrant. Between 2017 and 2020, CPJ documented at least three incidents of Nigerian police using telecom surveillance to track down and arrest journalists for their work. Military investigators have also sought to reveal journalists’ sources using digital forensics technology.

Nigerian journalists and civil society have stood up firmly against social media regulation and online censorship, including the ban on Twitter, now known as X, which ECOWAS declared illegal. Authorities also ordered telecom providers to block access to the Peoples Gazette in Nigeria.

We hope that your administration will take urgent steps to improve the press freedom environment in Nigeria and we stand prepared to provide assistance or further information that can advance the rights of journalists to work freely and safely.

Sincerely,

Jodie Ginsberg
President
Committee to Protect Journalists

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