Tuesday, May 5, 2026
28.3 C
Lagos

Media Bodies, CSOs Demand Investigation into Segun Olatunji’s Detention, Prosecution of Perpetrators

 

The undersigned media ORGANISATIONS, media associations and professional bodies as well as civil society organisations wish to express our deep concern and strong condemnation regarding the recent unlawful arrest, detention, brutalisation and torture of Mr. Segun Olatunji, Editor of FirstNews newspapers by military personnel in response to stories published by the media outlet.

We hereby demand a speedy, public, transparent and independent investigation into this act of barbarism displayed by military personnel as well as the brazen disregard for the Constitution and the Government’s obligations under relevant domestic laws and international instruments.

We further demand that all persons within and outside the military who are found to have been connected with this unacceptable violation of the rights of the journalist and the Constitution, including those who effected Mr. Olatunji’s arrest, detention and torture, those who directly commanded them, and those who ordered or instigated the action, should be prosecuted before the appropriate court and punished to the full extent of the Law.

The Chief of Defence Intelligence (CDI), who commands the Defence Intelligence Agency (DIA), Major General Emmanuel Undiandeye, reportedly ordered the operation that culminated in Mr. Olatunji’s abduction, torture, and detention while the Chief of Defence Staff, General Christopher Musa, to whom the CDI reports, was also reportedly aware of the operation but joined the CDI to claim for days that the journalist was not in their custody. They need to be held accountable for their roles in the matter.

Armed men wearing military uniforms and who introduced themselves as military personnel from the Nigerian Army, the Nigerian Air Force and the Defence Intelligence Agency (DIA), led by a military officer who also introduced himself as Colonel Lawal, invaded Mr. Olatunji’s home in a Lagos suburb on March 15, 2024, seized Olatunji’s mobile phone, handcuffed and bundled him in one of their vehicles and flown, blindfolded to Abuja where he was kept in an underground cell for 14 days.

Stripped to his boxers, legs manacled, hands in cuffs, kept incommunicado and not informed of his offence or the reason for his arrest nor of his rights as required by Law, as guaranteed under the Constitution, Olatunji was only released on March 29, 2024.

He was repeatedly interrogated about stories published by FirstNews in the absence of a legal practitioner of his choice because he was not given the opportunity to consult a lawyer. His mobile phone was also unlawfully searched in an effort by his abductors to ascertain the sources of the stories published by the news outlet.

Given the above, we unequivocally condemn this gestapo-like, unlawful and unconstitutional treatment of a journalist under a constitutional democracy simply for doing his job and therefore demand that:

* The Federal Government conducts a speedy, public, transparent and independent investigation into the incident in order identify all persons within and outside the military who were connected with the violation of Mr. Olatunji’s rights;

* There should be full accountability for all those responsible. Therefore, all persons within and outside the military who are found to have been connected with the incident, including those who effected Mr. Olatunji’s arrest, detention and torture, those who directly commanded them, and those who ordered or instigated the action, should be prosecuted before the appropriate court;

* In accordance with Section 35(6) of the 1999 Constitution, as amended, the Federal Government should pay Mr. Olatunji substantial compensation and issue a public apology to him for the unlawful and unconstitutional violation of his rights as well as the inhuman and degrading treatment to which he was subjected; and

* The Federal Government should make an unequivocal public commitment to respect and defend the rights and freedoms of journalists and other media practitioners to carry out their professional duties in a safe and conducive environment in accordance with Sections 22 and 39 of the 1999 Constitution, as amended, and advise all law enforcement, security, intelligence, military and other agencies accordingly.

* Advised any member of the public, dissatisfied or feel the content in a news medium directly affects or involves him or her unfairly, to approach the National Media Complaints Commission (NMCC) (The National Media Ombudsman) for redress, rather than engage in self-help

Should the Federal Government fail to respond positively to all these demands within 14 days from today, the undersigned media associations and professional bodies as well as civil society organisations will pursue all available mechanisms at the national, regional and international levels to ensure compliance with our demands.

 

  • Mallam Kabiru A. Yusuf

President, Newspapers Proprietors Association of Nigeria (NPAN) / President, Nigerian Press Organisations (NPO)

  • Yemisi Bamgbose

Executive Secretary, Broadcasting Organisations of Nigeria (BON)

Eze Anaba, President, Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE)

  • Comrade Chris Isiguzo

National President, Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ)

  • Maureen Chigbo

President, Guild of Corporate Online Publishers (GOCOP)

  • Musikilu Mojeed

President, International Press Institute, Nigeria Chapter (IPI Nigeria)

  • Edetaen Ojo

Executive Director, Media Rights Agenda (MRA)

  • Lanre Arogundade

Executive Director, International Press Centre (IPC)

  • Adetokunbo Mumuni

Director, Socio-Economic Rights & Accountability Project (SERAP)

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

Why Botswana Has the Best Sovereign Rating in Africa

Sovereign credit strength across Africa is concentrated within a...

emPLE Nigeria Paid over N7bn Claims to Support Individuals, Families, Businesses in 2025

emPLE, one of Nigeria’s rapidly growing insurance companies, has...

Passpoint Announces the Financial Orchestration Layer for Africa, Europe, G20

Passpoint, the financial infrastructure company building the orchestration layer...

Fixing the Real Problem with Nigeria’s SIM Recycling System

 By Elvis Eromosele Nigeria’s push to strengthen digital trust has...

Power, People, Finance: Critical Levers for SME Scale at Nigeria Business Summit 2026

Small and medium‑sized enterprises (SMEs) will only scale sustainably...

Topics

Universal Insurance to Host Brokers on April 26

Benedict Ujoatuonu Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer Universal Insurance Plc Universal...

NCC Opens Application for 2023 Talent Hunt Research through Hackathon

The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has kicked off activities...

FOR THE RECORD

Paper Presented by Olusola Teniola, President ATCON at Stakeholders...

The Promise of Digitalisation and Insurance Penetration in Africa

One of the major challenges of insurance business in...

Africa, ME Home Devices Market Tops $2bn in 1st Qtr

    The Middle East and Africa (MEA) smart home devices...

NCC Committed to Rapid Adoption of ICT in Health Sector

TEXT OF THE SPEECH DELIVERED BY THE EXECUTIVE VICE CHAIRMAN OF...

Economic Recovery Policy Will Bring Hope for Nigeria-ICAN

The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN) last...

Glo Rolls Out 4G LTE Network in Nigeria

Next generation network, Globacom, has switched on Nigeria's first...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img