Nigerian President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in London, Britain, on March 19, 2026.
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in Britain on March 19. CPJ and five other rights groups havev called on the Nigerian president to take action to protect the press ahead of elections in 2027. (Photo: Kin Cheung/Pool via Reuters)

CPJ, partners write to Nigerian president over VP comments about press freedom

Bola Ahmed Tinubu
President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria

Sent via email

Dear President Tinubu,

We, the undersigned Nigerian and international press freedom organizations, write to express alarm over Vice President Kashim Shettima Mustapha’s recent remarks suggesting that no journalists have been harassed in Nigeria since you took office. This mischaracterization conveys a grave indifference to the numerous and well-documented attacks on the press while you have been president, including violent abuses and arrests by Nigerian security forces.

We call for you to hold accountable those responsible for abuses against the media that have taken place during and before your tenure, and to take further action to reform Nigerian laws to ensure journalism is not criminalized. General elections are scheduled for early 2027 and your action to protect the press and Nigerian democracy is essential.

On February 27, a State House press release quoted Vice President Shettima saying to members of the Nigerian Press Council, “For the past three years, have you heard of any harassment of journalists?” He added that your “tolerance threshold is so high.” The press release also said your administration had promoted “an environment that is conducive for journalists to carry out their duties without harassment.”

Since you assumed office as Nigeria’s president in 2023, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has documented Nigerian authorities detaining journalists without warning and mistreating them in custody. Numerous journalists have been arrested and prosecuted over their reporting, including on defamation and cybercrime charges. In August 2024, CPJ documented at least 56 journalists assaulted or harassed by Nigerian security forces or citizens while covering the #EndBadGovernance demonstrations. Masked security forces even fired bullets and tear gas in the direction of 18 working journalists.

Additionally, in 2024, the International Press Centre (IPC) documented 65 cases of attacks on journalists. These attacks varied from physical assault, harassment, threats to life, intimidation, murder, and unlawful and prolonged detentions. 

Media Rights Agenda’s 2025 annual report similarly tracked 86 incidents of attacks on press freedom across Nigeria and the International Press Institute Nigeria has identified a pattern of impunity for such incidents in the country.

The Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development (CJID), which tracks media freedom violations, has verified at least 231 attacks on the press since you took office, and in 2024 wrote to your office urging decisive action to stop such incidents. 

Since 1992, CPJ has documented the killing of at least 23 journalists in Nigeria, as well as two others who are missing and presumed dead. At least 13 of these journalists are confirmed to have been killed in connection with their work. One of those journalists is Onifade Emmanuel Pelumi, who was found dead in a mortuary days after he was seen in police custody after being shot while reporting in Ikeja, the Lagos State Capital, in 2020. Over five years later, despite repeated pleadings, Pelumi’s body has yet to be returned to his family.

We have not seen meaningful efforts to end impunity when journalists are targeted, and your government even sought to appeal a court judgment ordering government actions to improve press freedom and the investigation of attacks against the press. Media Rights Agenda filed the case.

Nigeria has elections scheduled for early 2027, and we have documented how such moments of political tension often correspond with spikes in attacks on journalists. This is a pattern that should be addressed with informed government actions, but the Vice President’s recent statements demonstrate a clear failure to recognize and respond to the dangers Nigerian journalists face, including from law enforcement tasked with protecting the public. The remarks are also reminiscent of Nigerian officials’ previous false claims and mischaracterizations about press freedom conditions.

Vice President Shettima referred to your administration as “a friend of the media.” It is time to match those words with action by holding those responsible for attacks to account, returning Pelumi’s body to his family, and ensuring the periods before, during, and after the coming elections are safe for those who report the news.

Sincerely,

Angela Quintal, Africa Director, Committee to Protect Journalists

Busola Ajibola, Deputy Director, Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development

Churchill Otieno, President, The Africa Editors Forum

Edetaen Ojo, Executive Director, Media Rights Agenda

Lanre Arogundade, Executive Director, International Press Centre

Musikilu Mojeed, President, International Press Institute (IPI) Nigeria

Read the full letter here.