By Jerome-Mario Utomi

 

‘’Freedom of speech is not about good speech versus bad; it’s about who holds the power to decide which is which.—Robyn E. Blummer, Editorial Writer, and Columnist’’.

 

I
t is no longer news that media professionals/stakeholders within the industry and across the world celebrated on Monday May 3, 2021,  the annual World Press Freedom Day declared by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).  This year’s theme; “Information as a Public Good”, among other intentions underlines the indisputable importance of verified and reliable information.  It  calls  attention  to  the  essential  role of free and professional  journalists  in  producing  and  disseminating this information, by tackling misinformation and other harmful content.

At about the same time, the celebration offered me the opportunity to reflect on how citizens of every nation (democratic or otherwise), hunger for ‘public forum or sphere where the issues of the public interests are viewed as central, and openly considered, discussed or debated. And how the politicians and public office holders for their part, have a great interest in how the media covers their behavior. They depend on the media to provide the information they need about the people and the society. The media practitioners, in turn, depend much on the authorities (public office holders) for their information.

Increasingly, by choice or by accident, a number of issues daily emanate from this mutual dependency particularly, as the vast majority of public office holders are allergic to accepting their political past/mistakes while others are not disposed to having their political future discussed. Also, the media professional in their search for new but personal fields to increase their wealth and wellbeing have at some points opted out of its primary mandate of objective reportage to become a willing tool in the hands of these political gladiators. And in the process, failed to inculcate and reinforce positive political, cultural, social attitudes among the citizens, and failed to create a mood in which people become keen to acquire skills and disciplines of a developed nation. Indeed, some media professionals have overtly become more cautious than courageous in performing their agenda setting roles. They have on many occasions watched the making of political cum economic decisions that breeds poverty and perpetrates powerlessness, yet took the easy way out without addressing the underlying factors thereby leaving the masses confused.

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Consequently, the nation Nigeria has on countless occasions witnessed this relationship snowball into a frosty one as the government attempts to unjustly moderate, control or regulate public discourse using decrees(during the military eras) and draconian legislation to impose punishments that are incongruence with logic or reason. The situation was made worse by the fact that our nation Nigeria is not a natural country but an artificial creation made up of multicultural, multi religious and multilingual groups.

Talking about such frosty relationship between the Government and the Press in Nigeria, while the excruciating ordeal of two journalists with the Guardian Newspapers -Nduka Irabor and Tunde Thompson jailed by a  military tribunal on the 4th of July,1984   for reports that were not lacking in merit but asymmetrically viewed to have contravened  the infamous decree 4, remains a very bad signpost for the military era,  the feeble attempt by the nation’s National Assembly to, but  introduce the Internet Falsehood and Manipulations and Hate Speech Bills remains the dark spots of our democratic experience. Within this space also, there was also the case of the Nigerian Press Council Bill 2018,  a bill greeted with knocks and viewed by industry watchers as draconian and another attempt to take the media industry back to the dark days.

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At the most basic level, the Internet Falsehood and Manipulations Bill, 2019, sponsored by Senator Mohammed Sani Musa,(APC Niger East), among other provisions, sought to curtail the spread of fake information. And seeks a three-year jail term for anyone involved in what it calls the abuse of social media or an option of fine of N150, 000 or both. It is also proposing a fine of N10 million for media houses involved in peddling falsehood or misleading the public.

The hate speech bill on its part proposed that any person found guilty of any form of hate speech that results in the death of another person shall die by hanging upon conviction. This is in addition to its call for the establishment of an ‘Independent National Commission for Hate Speeches’, which shall enforce hate speech laws across the country

Without much labour, the most telling evidence about the bills, good intention is signposted in their resolve to curtail the spread of fake information and hate speeches in the country.  However, in connection with these bills, it is necessary to especially stress at some points which apply generally.

However, when one looks at these complex provisions, It will not be an overstatement to characterize as a misguided priority as our failures as a nation lies not in fake news or hate speech but in the system.

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What was even most frightening about the bill is that it came at a time when world leaders were standing up with sets of values that encourage listening and responding constructively to views expressed by citizens, giving others the benefits of the doubt, providing support and recognizing the interests and achievements of its citizens, such in the estimation of our lawmakers have become the ripped time to threaten its citizens with jail terms and capital punishments.

This fact also brings an important distinction to the fore.

Social media is not just another platform for disseminating falsehood. Rather, it is a platform for pursuing the truth, and the decentralized creation and distribution of ideas; in the same way, that government is a decentralized body for the promotion and protection of the people’s life chances. It is a platform, in other words, for development that the government must partner with.

Very instructive, I have no despair about the future of media practice and freedom of expression in Nigeria but it is an unhappy truth that free speech is under attack- a state of affairs considered bad for morals.

To further support this assertion, it is a well-established axiom that ‘without wood, the fire goes out, charcoal keeps the ember glowing as wood keeps the fire burning’. Same is applicable to the factors propelling fake News/hate speeches. It is a barefaced truth that the death of leadership, the asymmetrical posturing of our political space and the refusal to have it restructured, among others, propels fake news and hate speeches.

Utomi, is the Programme Coordinator (Media and Public Policy), Social and Economic Justice Advocacy (SEJA), Lagos. He could be reached via;jeromeutomi@yahoo.com

 

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