Topic: Presidency’s story: Police grill, detain 4 Leadership Newspaper’s journalists  (Read 1561 times)

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ABUJA—The police, Monday, detained four journalists of Leadership Newspaper, after grilling them extensively for several hours at the Force Headquarters over a story which the paper ran last week.

Leadership Newspaper had last week published a story with a banner headline: “Outrage trails presidential directive on Tinubu, APC”, alleging that the Presidency was set to stall the emergence of the opposition party among other decisions aimed at inflicting pains in the nation.

The report, which apparently angered and embarrassed the Presidency, triggered several denials by top aides to Mr. President, who ordered the police to fish out the writers and ascertain the sources of their information.

Acting on the presidential directive, the police invited the journalists, who authored the story to report to its office yesterday and answer questions on the issue.

However, the invitation took a different dimension when four journalists from the tabloid arrived the Louis Edet House and went to the seventh floor to meet the Deputy Inspector General of Police, who was assigned to interrogate them.

Although the quartet of Chinyere Fred-Adegbulugbe, Chuks Ohuegbe, Tony Amokeodo and Chibuzor Ukaibe arrived the office of DIG Gama at around 9.45 am yesterday, they were not allowed to leave after being made to write their statements at 12pm.

The four journalists were later grilled by three senior police officers, who insisted that the writers must reveal the sources of their information in the Presidency and how the stories got to them.

They would neither allow the journalists to leave nor do any other thing. After taking the statements from them, the police officers simply told them that they would hear from them.

At the time of this report, the four had been with the police for eight hours.

Vanguard learnt that the journalists’ interrogators were upset when the writers insisted that they would not disclose the source of their information, as it was against the ethics of their profession to do so.


MD Abubakar, Police IG

“We told the police that we received the documents we used for the stories in the course of our duties and that we had no intention to betray our sources,” one of the journalists said.

The defiance of the journalists was said to have infuriated the police, who left them in the office. It was not clear as at the time of this report when the four journalists would be freed.

In a letter dated April 7, 2013, marked CR:3000/X/FHQ/ABJ/VOL.49/34 and signed by one Danlami Mohammed, a Deputy Commissioner of Police, DCP,  the police authorities summoned the trio of Leadership Newspaper’s Group News Editor, Tony Amokeodo and two correspondents, Chibuzor Ukaibe and Taiwo Ogunmola-Omilani, to report to the Deputy Inspector-General of Police ‘D’ Department.

The letter was addressed to the chairman, Leadership Group Limited.

The letter reads in part: “This office is investigating the circumstances leading to your Front Page publication entitled, “Outrage Trails Presidential Directive On Tinubu, APC” and a sub-title captioned ‘Bromide of the Presidential Directive.’

“Based on our fact finding efforts, you are hereby requested to release the above mentioned reporters to interview the Deputy Inspector General of Police ‘D’ Department, FCID, on Monday, April 8, 2013 at 1000hours.”

In the said presidential directive, dated March 26, 2013, and published by Leadership Newspaper, Jonathan was alleged to have hinted at plans to target the business interests of the ACN national leader, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, and to frustrate the merger of the opposition parties at all costs.

The President was said to have also indicated in the controversial directive that petrol prices would be increased from the present N97 per litre to between N130 and N140, but that public opinion should first be gauged on the matter.

When the Presidency denied issuing such a directive, the paper went ahead to publish the ‘directive’ and insisted that it stood by its earlier report, an action that upset the Presidency the more.

The arrest, interrogation and detention of journalists was a regular feature of the military regimes in Nigeria and it was considered outlawed with the return to the democratic government until the latest attempt to resurrect the repressive method.


Read more: http://kaaf.com/2013/04/Presidencys-story-Police-grill-detain-4-Leadership-Newspapers-journalists-328770

 

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