Cla 309
Cla 309
By
Ayobami A. Ojebode, Ph.D
&
Femi Ayandele
2
Table of Contents
LECTURE ONE: GENESIS OF PRESS LAW IN NIGERIA
LECTURE TWO: THE PRESS BEFORE THE CONSTITUTION
LECTURE THREE: PUBLIC OFFICERS VERSUS PUBLIC FIGURES,
NATIONAL INTEREST VERSUS PUBLIC
INTEREST
LECTURE FOUR: THE PURPOSE OF LAW AND ETHICS IN THE
SOCIETY
LECTURE FIVE: THE MEANING AND PURPOSE OF LAW IN THE
SOCIETY: ESSENCE OF ETHICS
LECTURE SIX: THEORIES OF ETHICS
LECTURE SEVEN: THE REGULATION OF THE MASS MEDIA
LECTURE EIGHT: DEFAMATION
LECTURE NINE: LIBEL AND SLANDER
LECTURE NINE II: DEFENCES TO DEFAMATION
LECTURE TEN: SEDITION
LECTURE ELEVEN: COPYRIGHT, PIRACY AND PLAGIARISM
LECTURE TWELVE: CONTEMPT OF COURT AND CONTEMPT OF
PARLIAMENT
LECTURE THIRTEEN: THE OFFICIAL SECRETS ACT
LECTURE FOURTEEN: THE OBLIGATIONS AND OWNERSHIP OF MASS
MEDIA IN NIGERIA: CONSTITUTIONAL
PROVISIONS
LECTURE FIFTEEN: ETHICAL PROBLEMS IN NIGERIAN
JOURNALISM
LECTURE SIXTEEN: REGULATORY MECHANISMS CUM ETHICAL
CASE STUDIES
LECTURE SEVENTEEN: HOW POWERFUL IS THE PRESS?
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LECTURE ONE: GENESIS OF PRESS LAW IN NIGERIA
Introduction
The 1960s witnessed the height of nationalist movements that culminated in
the political independence of many African countries. But almost three
decades after those political emancipations, the questions remain: How
much have post-independence African governments borrowed from the
colonial statute books in shaping contemporary African press laws? How
have the courts interpreted those laws?
This lecture assesses the Public Officers (Protection Against False
Accusation) Decree No. 4 of 1984 because most of its provisions are found
in nearly all post-independence press laws enacted before it. The law has
been described as the amalgam of all press laws enacted in post-
independence Nigeria.
Objectives
At the end of this lecture, you should be able to:
1. trace the history of press law in Nigeria
2. discuss the implications of various sections of the Nigerian
constitutional provisions on press freedom.
3. discuss the relationship between decree No. 4 of 1984 and the colonial
seditions offences ordinance of 1909.
Pre-Test
1. Examine the implications of decree No. 4 of 1984 on the information
gathering and dissemination of the Nigerian press.
2. Discuss the history of press law in Nigeria.
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3. How would you x-ray the press under the 1960 and 1979 constitutions
of Nigeria?
CONTENT
Public officers (Protection Against False Accusation) Decree No 4, 1984
Drafted on March 29, 1984, Decree No. 4 was the most dreaded, most
repressive and the last press law enacted in Nigeria. It was promulgated
during the military regime of Major General Buhari which did not take
kindly to press criticisms. The law was drafted to punish authors of false
statements and reports that exposed the then military administration and or
its officials to ridicule or contempt. Section 1, sub-sections (i), (ii) and (iii)
of the law-the most formidable section-provided that:
Any person who publishes in any form, whether written or otherwise,
any message, rumour, report or statement, being a message, rumour,
statement or report which is false in any material particular or which
brings or is calculated to bring the Federal Military Government or the
Government of a state or public officer to ridicule or disrepute, shall
be guilty of an offence under this Decree.
The law also conferred on the Head of State the power to ban a newspaper
and to revoke the license of a wireless telegraph station in any part of the
federation. If such action was construed to be in the interest of the nation,
Section 2, sub-sections (i) and (ii) of the law provided that:
Where the head of the Federal Military Government is satisfied that the
unrestricted circulation in Nigeria of a newspaper is or may be detrimental to
the interest of the federation or any part thereof, he may by order publish in
the Gazette, prohibit the circulation in the federation or in any part thereof,
as the case may require, of that newspaper; and, unless any other period is
prescribed in the code, the prohibition shall continue for a period of twelve
months unless sooner revoked or extended, as the case may require.
Where the Head of the Federal Military Government is satisfied that the
unrestricted existence in Nigeria of any wireless telegraphy station is
detrimental to the interest of the federation or any part thereof, he may by an
order publish in the Gazette (a) revoke the license to such wireless
telegraphy station under the provisions of the Wireless Telegraphy Act of
1961: or (b) order the closure or forfeiture to the Federal Military
Government, as the case may be, of the wireless telegraphy station
concerned (Gazette 1984).
The law also provided that offending journalists and publishers are tried by a
military tribunal composed of three members of the armed forces and a
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serving or retired High Court judge. The tribunal‘s ruling could not be
appealed in any court. Section 8 of the press law specified punishments for
offenders, and provided for a prison term of up to two years without the
option of a fine. In the case of news media corporations, the decree provided
for a fine of not less than 10,000 naira (Ogbondah, 1986).
Colonial Roots
Where are the origins of the Public Officers (Protection Against False
Accusation) Decree? An examination of colonial documents and statutory
provisions regulating the Nigerian press reveals that the roots of this press
law are clearly found in the colonial period of Nigerian journalism history.
Fragments of the law can be found in the early newspaper laws of Nigeria.
One of such laws was the Seditious Offences Ordinance of 1909 which, like
Decree No. 4 of 1984, criminalized the publication of false reports or
statements that exposed government officials or the government itself to
ridicule or contempt. Published in September 1909 in the official Gazette
and reprinted in an extraordinary issue of the government Gazette dated
October 1, 1909, the Seditious Offences Ordinance under Section 3 and 5,
provided that:
The above provisions clearly show that section 1, sub-section (i) of the 1984
press law was modeled after the 1909 newspaper law.
Section 6 of the Seditious Offences Ordinance empowered police,
magistrates and district commissioners to check seditious publications in
their areas of authority by requiring suspected offenders to execute a bond,
to be of good conduct for one year or for such a period as the police,
magistrate or district commissioner would be satisfied with the alleged
offender‘s behaviour and conduct.
The event that precipitated the 1909 newspaper law was Herbert Macaulay‘s
publication of a pamphlet titled, ‗Governor Egerton and the Railway‘. The
pamphlet leveled charges of maladministration against the governor and
drew attention to allegations of corrupt practices in the Egerton
administration. Concern about the effects of unrestricted press criticism led
to the drafting of a law based on the Indian Penal Code:
Which would allow reasonable freedom of discussion of government
policy but which would give the government power to punish
publications… designed to influence an excitable and ignorant
populace the bulk of whom are absolutely under the control of
Headman (sic) and chiefs who themselves have only recently emerged
from barbarism and are still actuated by the old traditions of race
(Omu, 1968).
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The language and provisions of Section 8, sub-section (i) of Decree No. 4 of
1984 are similar to those of Section 3 of the 1909 colonial newspaper law.
That section of the 1984 newspaper law provided for a prison term of up to
two years for convicted offenders of the law-the same provisions found in
the colonial law. The 1984 press law merely differed slightly from its
colonial primogenitor in the sense that it (Decree No. 4) provided no option
of fine for convicted persons. Apart from this difference, Decree No. 4 of
1984 provided for the exact terms of punishment as the 1909 colonial
Seditious Offences Ordinance. Therefore, it could be argued that the Public
Officers (Protection Against False Accusation) Decree No. 4 of 1984 was an
offshoot of the premier colonial press law.
Fragments of the roots of Decree No. 4 can also be found in other colonial
statutory provisions. One of those statues was the 1916 Criminal Code
which removed the option of fine found in the 1909 law for the publication
of these reports. In the 1916 Criminal Code, false publication was defined as
any ‗statement, rumour or report likely to bring any public officer to
disrepute… (Gazette, 1916). The same phrase appeared in Section 1, sub-
section (i) and (ii) of the 1984 law enacted to control freedom of the press in
Nigeria. In addition to this similarity, the draftsmanship of Section 6, sub-
section (i) of Decree No. 4 of 1984 was exactly the same as that of the 1916
colonial Criminal Code in the sense that it provided no option of fine for
anyone convicted of disseminating false rumour, report or statement. In this
sense, it can be logically concluded that the origins of Section 9, sub-section
(i) of the 1984 press law are found in the 1916 Criminal Code of Nigeria.
A revised version of the Criminal Code of 1942 prohibited the importation
into Nigeria of any newspapers or other publications considered undesirable
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in the interest of the country. Section 2, sub-section (i) of Decree No. 4
authorized the Head of State to prohibit the circulation in Nigeria of any
newspapers if such prohibition was desirable in the interest of the federation.
That section stipulated that where the Head of the Federal Military
Government is satisfied that the unrestricted circulation in Nigeria of a
newspaper is… detrimental to the interest of the federation… he may…
prohibit the circulation… of the newspaper…‘ (Gazette, 1984).
Although this section did not empower the government to prohibit the
importation of newspapers into the country, its intent on prohibition of
newspaper circulation within the country is nevertheless the same as that of
the 1942 colonial Criminal Code. The colonial press law prohibited
newspaper importation into the country, while the post-independence press
law prohibited the circulation of newspapers within the country under the
same condition as in the 1942 law. The provisions of both laws are the same,
and any difference is but a matter of rhetoric. Section 2, sub-section (i) of
the 1984 press laws is but an extension of some of the provisions of the 1942
colonial statutory provisions.
The roots of Decree No. 4 of 1984 can also be observed in the revised
Criminal Code of 1958. Section 51 of that law provided that:
Any person who does or attempts to do, or makes any preparation to
do, or conspires with any person to do, any act with a seditious
intention; alters any seditious words; prints, publishes, sells, offers for
sale, distributes or reproduces any seditious publication, unless he has
no reason to believe that it is seditious; shall be guilty of an offence
and liable on conviction for a first offender to imprisonment for two
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years or to a fine of 100 pounds or both and for a subsequent offence
to imprisonment for three years… (Times International, 1985).
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It shall be no defence to a charge under this section that he did not
know or did not have reason to believe that the statement, rumour or
report was false unless he proves that prior to publication, he took
reasonable measures to verify the accuracy of such statement, rumour
or report (Gazette, 1955).
As can be noted, the language of section 1 sub-section (i) and (ii) of Decree
No. 4 resembled that of the 1955 newspaper law which regulated editorial
content. The above section of the 1955 colonial press law in the former
Eastern region became the model for the press laws of the other regions and
the federation. For example, the law found its way into chapter 81 of the
Western Nigerian Newspaper Law of 1957 and section 23 of the Northern
Nigerian Penal Code. It was also incorporated into the Newspaper
Amendment Act of 1964 which affected the whole country. According to an
explanatory memorandum in the official Gazette in which the Act was
published, the 1984 law was intended to ‗bring the law relating to
newspapers as printed or published in Lagos more into line with newspaper
legislation in operation elsewhere in Nigeria‘ (Gazette, 1964). The
provisions of Section 4 of this Act are phrased in the manner of the 1955
newspaper law of Eastern Region of Nigeria, and it provides that:
Any person, who authorizes for publication, publishes, reproduces or
circulates for sale in a newspaper any statement, rumour or report
knowing or having reason to believe that such statement, rumour or
report is false shall be guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to
a fine of two hundred pounds or to imprisonment for a term of one
year.
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It shall be no defence to a charge under this section that he did not
know or did not have reason to believe that the statement, rumour or
report was false unless the proves that, prior to publication, he look
reasonable measures to verify the accuracy of such statement, rumour
or report… (Gazette, 1964).
Role of Judiciary
In most societies, courts interpret laws and judges are regarded as the
arbiters between governors and the governed. The importance of a vigorous
judiciary was not lost on Nigeria‘s Attorney-General and Justice Minister,
Bola Ajibola, when he stated that the success or otherwise of a constitution
depended to a great extent on the virility of the legal system (West Africa,
1987). Sylvanus Ekwelie (1986) believes that occasional judicial activism
might provide a stronger bulwark against press harassment than statutory
guarantees.
Constitutional Provision
According to Section 24 of the 1960 independence constitution, Section 25
of the 1963 republican constitutions and Section 36 of the 1979 constitution,
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every Nigerian is entitled to freedom of expression including freedom to
hold opinions and to receive and impart ideas and information without
interference. These rights are, however, almost qualified out of existence.
For example, Section 36, sub-section (iii) of the 1979 constitution states:
Nothing in this section shall invalidate any law that is reasonably
justifiable in a democratic society (a) for the purpose of preventing the
disclosure of information proffered in confidence, maintaining the
authority and independence of the courts or regulating telephone,
wireless broadcasting, television or the exhibition of cinematograph
films, or (b) imposing restrictions upon persons holding office under
the State, members of the Armed Forces of the Federation or members
of the Police Force.
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Trail of Chike Obi
In 1961, Dr. Chike Obi, leader of the minority Dynamic Party, published a
pamphlet, The people: Facts That You Must Know, part of which read,
‗Down with the enemies of the people, the exploiters of the weak and the
oppressors of the poor… the days of those who have enriched themselves at
the expense of the poor are numbered.‘ He was charged with sedition. Many
people thought the government over-reacted. Nwabueze (1973) believes
Obi‘s attack on the government was a campaign rhetoric ‗intended simply to
induce the people not to vote for it at the next election.‘ The trail court,
nevertheless, found Obi guilty.
Obi‘s appeal provided the Supreme Court the opportunity to rule whether the
human rights provisions of the constitution invalidated and/or modified the
sedition law. But the nation‘s highest court dismissed the case. Chief Justice
Sir Ademola said:
A person has a right to discuss any grievance or criticize, canvass and
censure the acts of Government and their public policy. He may even
do this with a view to affecting a change in the party in power or to
call attention to the weakness of a Government, so long as he keeps
within the limits of fair criticism. It is clearly constitutional by means
of fair argument to criticize the Government of the day. What is not
permitted is to criticize the Government in a malignant manner as
described above, for such attacks by their nature, tend to affect the
public peace (Okonkwo and Naish, 1964)
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Amakiri Affair
On July 30, 1973, the Nigerian Observer published a story by its Port
Harcourt correspondent, Minere Amakiri, on the grievances of Rivers State‘s
teachers. The teachers had threatened to go on strike unless their demands
were met. Amakiri was arrested and detained for 27 hours in the guard room
of the State House in Port Harcourt. His hair and beard were shaved off and
he was given 24 strokes with a cane. An aide to the River State governor
explained that the story embarrassed the governor because its publication
coincided with the governor‘s birthday celebration. The veracity of
Amakiri‘s report was never challenged or in doubt. Amakiri sued and was
awarded 10,760 naira damages in 1974. The trail judge, Ambrose Allagoa,
remarked before passing judgment that ‗in spite of the military rule, the
fundamental rights touching personal liberty, freedom of movement, right to
property, freedom of conscience are still provided in the constitution‘
(Onagoruwa, 1976). Justice Allagoa also described the court as the
watchdogs of those rights. According to him, the courts ‗will spare no pains
in tracking down the arbitrary use of power where such cases are brought
before the court‘ (Onagoruwa, 1976).
But the question is: How can the courts protect the rights of Nigerians when
judges are intimidated by extra-legal forces? According to the Chief Judge
of Plateau state, George Uloko, fear of removal and strict control through
‗back stairs influences‘ are major factors that stifle judges‘ initiative and
morale (West Africa, 1986).
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Arthur Nwankwo’s Case
In August 1982, a gubernatorial candidate for Anambra state, Arthur
Nwankwo, published a book, How Jim Nwobodo Rules Anambra State. He
was arraigned before a court on charges of seditious publication. It was
alleged that his publication intended to bring hatred and contempt or excite
disaffection against the governor of Anambra state. The trail judge agreed
with the prosecutor and sentenced Nwankwo to 12 months imprisonment.
The judge also made this starting statement: ‗The conviction and punishment
of the accused, I hope, will help to stem the tempo of vulgar abuse and
irresponsibility of both the politicians and media practitioners‘ (Nwankwo,
1983)
Nwankwo appealed that decision and on July 27, 1983, the federal court of
appeal discharged and acquitted him. According to the appeal court,
‗Sections 50 and 51 of the Criminal Code were anachronistic in the light of
constitutional changes and the national sovereignty‘ (Ekwelie, 1986). In
essence, the appeal court was concerned that an independent Nigeria still
operated under laws that were passed by aliens to serve the purpose of a
colonial administration. Furthermore, the court questioned the law‘s
constitutionality.
Nwankwo‘s acquittal showed that the sedition law was inconsistent with
constitutional guarantees. Earlier, on February 12, 1983, the Chief Justice of
Anambra state had discharged and acquitted the Weekly Trumpet of sedition
by the Anambra State Governor for publishing an article, ‗Just Before the
Storm.‘ In that case, the Chief Justice ruled that the sedition law was
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inconsistent with section 36 of the 1979 constitution which guaranteed
freedom of expression (Ekwelie, 1986).
Summary
The British colonial administration of Nigeria began in 1861. For about a
hundred years, the British enacted several statutory provisions that
regulated the press. But almost three decades after the attainment of
political independence, the spirit and content of those colonial laws are
still found on the pages of Nigeria‘s press laws.
Post-Test
1. Attempt the pre-test questions again
2. How do you think the court can protect the rights of journalists
when judges are intimidated by extra-legal forces?
3. Why are the contents of the British colonial laws still found on the
pages of Nigeria‘s press laws?
References
Ekwelie, Silvanus A. (1986), ‗The Nigerian Press Under Civilian Rule‘,
Journalism Quarterly, Vol. 63, Spring, p. 98.
Federal Republic of Nigeria Supplement to Official Gazette Extraordinary,
April 4, 1984 p. A53.
Nwabueze, B.O. (1973). Constitutionalism in the Emergent States,
London: C. Hurst.
Nwankwo, Arthur A. (1983). Justice: Sedition Charge Conviction,
Imprisonment and Acquittal of Chief Arthur Nwankwo, Enugu:
Frontline Group Publishers.
Ogbondah, Chris W. (1986). Nigeria‘s Decree No. 4: A Sword Against the
Pen. Unpublished Ph.D Dissertation submitted to Southern Illinois
University at Carbondale.
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Omu, Fred (1968). ‗The Dilemma of Press Freedom in Colonial Africa:
The West African Example‘, Journal of African History, Vol. 9., p.
293.
Okonkwo, C.O. and M.E. Naish (1964). Criminal Law in Nigeria. Lagos:
African Universities Press.
Onagoruwa, G. Olu (1976), Press Freedom in Crisis: A Study of the
Amakiri Case. Ibadan: Sketch Publishing Co.
Government Gazette, Sept. 29 and Oct. 1, 1909.
Nigeria Gazette, January-June, 1916.
Eastern Region of Nigeria Government, Gazette, June 30, 1955.
Federal Republic of Nigeria Official Gazette, Sept. 5, 1964.
National Concord (Nigeria), February 6, 1984, p. 1.
Times International (Nigeria), Sept. 23, 1985, p. 6.
West Africa, May 5, 1986, p. 969.
West Africa, July 13, 1987, p. 1365.
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LECTURE TWO: THE PRESS BEFORE THE CONSTITUTION
Introduction
The main argument of this lecture is that a free press is vital to the
political, social and economic development of every nation through the
ability to expose corruption and abuse of office within the ruling class. In
order to provide a framework to understand the lecture, the meanings of
press freedom will be explained. Though virtually every constitution in the
world has guaranteed freedom of the press, the term has been interpreted
differently according to traditions and needs of each country. In this
lecture the etymology of press freedom is also uncovered.
Objectives
At the end of this lecture, you should be able to:
know a brief history of freedom of expression in the ancient world
know a brief history of press freedom in old England
trace a brief history of press freedom in Nigeria
define press freedom
understand the legal bases of press freedom in Nigeria.
know the major constraints to press freedom in Nigeria
Pre-Test
1. What are the ways in which scholars and professionals have
defined press freedom?
2. Examine the origin of press freedom in Nigeria.
3. Discuss the major impediments to freedom of the press in
Nigeria.
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CONTENT
The Struggles for Free Expression in the Ancient World
From time immemorial, human beings have been struggling for more
freedom to express themselves, in social life, in religion, in the arts, in
political and economic activities and even in the scientific field. In many
countries of the world, there is now considerable freedom for people to
express themselves and pursue their legitimate undertakings. But it has not
always been so. In the past, political and religious leaders were very
uncomfortable with those with new ideas and indeed made life unbearable for
such people.
As a result, many great minds were forced into extinction prematurely long
before society realised her mistake. For example, the great Greek philosopher,
Socrates (470 - 399 B.C.) was killed for allegedly corrupting the youths
of Athens with his strange ideas; Jesus Christ was crucified for preaching a
new doctrine; and Galileo Galilie (1564-1642), the Italian astronomer and
physicist was killed for his scientific discoveries.
The English Bill of Rights was passed in 1688, under William and Mary as
King and Queen of England, after what was referred to as "the Glorious
Revolution", following disputes over succession to the throne between
Catholics and Protestants.
But more importantly, the Bill of Rights was a profound statement of liberties,
whereby the individual was protected against the distortion of justice in the
interest of the crown.
The Bill of Rights was ratified by the American Congress in 1789, in order
to allay the fears of some states that the new American Constitution did
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not guarantee enough freedoms. The Bill of Rights, which was actually 10
amendments to the American Constitution, then adequately guaranteed
freedom of religion, speech, the press, petition and assembly. It also
guaranteed the freedom to carry arms, and the right to be protected against
unreasonable searches and arrests, trial by jury, due process of law, and the
protection of property rights.
In other parts of the world, revolutions such as happened in old England and
America, also took place before laws were passed to grant more basic
freedoms to people. In fact, at the time the above upheavals were taking place
in America, a very bloody revolution was taking place in France, which is
now popularly referred to as the French Revolution. In France -the brutality of
the aristocrats towards the masses gave rise to a popular uprising which
eliminated the upper class and abolished the monarchy forever.
It was at this time that intellectuals like John Milton started publishing
popular essays in support of freedom of expression. Milton's argument was
that falsehood and truth should be allowed to grapple and let the superior
force win. His most famous essay was the Arepagitica (1644), which
advanced formidable opposition against the existing press licensing laws
of England. In 1694 the licensing was discontinued and this new era of
freedom gave birth to the first real newspaper in England, called the Daily
Courant, in 1702.
But the obnoxious laws of England had caused many intellectuals to flee to
the New World (America). Consequently, in the first rudimentary
newspapers in that part of the world, the Publick Occurance was founded
by Benjamin Harris, who had been expelled from England for operating an
underground press. But the first real newspaper in America was the Boston
Newsletter, which was founded by John Campbell and Bartholomew Green in
1704.
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Subsequently, other countries in the sub region embraced the trade: Ghana
in 1822; Liberia in 1826; Nigeria in 1859 and Gambia in 1883.
The first newspaper published in Nigeria, Iwe Irohin, existed from 1859 to
1867. It appears that subsequently, there was an absence of newspapers
for almost a decade, before a tribe of secular newspapers began to appear in
the 1880s. By the early 1900s, the British Colonial masters started becoming
uncomfortable with the emergent press, and began to enact harsh laws to put
the press in check. According to Omu, (ibid: 174), "the heightened tone of
press criticism which marked political opposition from the last days of the
nineteenth century to the eve of the First World War could not but irritate
the colonial administration". Accordingly, the colonial masters enacted the
first of such laws, the Newspaper Ordinance of 1903. Then came the Seditious
Offences Ordinance of 1909 and subsequent ones, as the need arose and many
more. A complete inventory of all the press laws from 1903 has been
provided by Momoh (2004, op cit).
So began the struggle for press freedom in Nigeria, which has continued ever
since. It has been observed that most of the press laws enacted in Nigeria
from colonial times were obnoxious impositions by those in power to
protect themselves from the legitimate searchlight of a dutiful and patriotic
press.
Incidentally, the struggle for press freedom in Nigeria was tied to the struggle
for political independence. The early newspapers used their editorials and
columns to crusade relentlessly for political independence. As noted by Okoye
(2003:11),
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as far back as 1881, when the Colony of Lagos was being
administered from Sierra Leon the question of independence from
colonial rule had started bothering newspaper editorial writers.
For example, consider the following excerpt from an editorial
Published in the Lagos Times and Gold Coast Colony Advertiser of
March 9, 1881:
"We are not clamouring for immediate independence, but it should
always be borne in mind that the present order of things will not last
forever. . . . A time will come when the colonies on the West Coast
will be left to regulate their own internal and external affairs"
Also deserving of special mention are some social critics who have been very
vocal in their advocacy for good governance and human rights. Some of
them used newspapers extensively as columnists, though they were not
employed full time by the newspapers. They include: Wole Soyinka, Tai
Solarin, Bola Ige, Agwu Okpanku, and many others.
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Soji Alabi (2003: 53) says that Press Freedom "simply means that the press
should be allowed to publish without prior restraint." This, he added,
implies that the press should be free to publish or broadcast what it deems
fit to the public.
Onagoruwa (1985: 15) defines Press Freedom as the right of the press to
"publish without being subjected to intimidation, threat, molestation or
blackmail."
Also, Aiyar (1979) defines Press Freedom as follows:
... the right to report facts honestly and
faithfully, even if they prove inconvenient or
embarrassing to someone. It means liberty to
interpret the evidence before them
according to their (reporters') independent
judgement and journalist's conscience.
Press, Freedom is the absolute freedom to gather, hold, express and
disseminate objective formation and opinions without official or
unofficial restrictions via written and unwritten laws and actions.
If we examine these definitions closely, we shall see that they are more or
less, saying the same thing in different words. They are all saying that
newsmen and women, individually and collectively, or mass media
organisations, should enjoy the liberty to do their legitimate duties
without having to obtain prior permission from any .authority, and without
having to bother whether what is eventually divulged to the public will suit or
embarrass any public official somewhere.
Another important question is: why is there so much concern over press
freedom in the world? The answer to that is not farfetched. If there is no
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press freedom or if press freedom is diminished at any time, it is not
only journalists that will be hurt, but the entire society will face the
consequences.
On the occasion of the World Press Freedom Day, May 3, 2000, the
immediate past United Nations Secretary General, Kofi Annan,
UNESCO Director General, Koichiro Matsuura and United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights, Mary Robinson issued a joint statement
and said:
Press freedom is, therefore, essential to ensure that those in authority are
constantly monitored so that they do not overstep their bounds, to the
detriment of the society. Indeed, there are many credible international Non-
Governmental Organisations (NGOs) which dutifully monitor the degree of
press freedom in each country of the world and publish reports on their
findings. Freedom House is one such organisation. It measures each
country's press in four aspects:
1. the degree to which laws and administrative decisions affect
news content.
2. the degree of political influence or control over content.
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3. the degree of economic influence on the media by
governmental or private sectors, and
4. the degree of oppression, from censoring materials to killing
of journalists.
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2. The exercise of the right provided for in the foregoing paragraph
shall not be subject to prior censorship but shall be subject to
subsequent imposition of liability which shall be expressly
established by law to the extent necessary in order to ensure:
(a) respect for the rights or reputation of others; or
(b) the protection of national security public health or morale
;
Summary
You can see that in most countries, press freedom is encouraged as an essential
ingredient of the democratic culture. Even though the Nigerian constitution
does not expressly provide for freedom of the press, the constitution makers
must have reasoned that by granting freedom of expression, that of the press
had been taken care of. Despite this constitutional drawback, the Nigerian
press has been virile from Colonial times to the present day. Indeed, it has
been argued that freedom is never given to anyone on a platter of gold, but
that those who desire freedom have to fight for it. And the Nigerian press has
given a good account of itself in its struggle for more press freedom.
In this lecture, we have surveyed the history of the struggles for free
expression in various parts of the world, both in the ancient and modern time.
We also looked at several definitions of press freedom given by scholars.
What all the definitions are saying is that press freedom is the liberty of the
mass media to do their duty of informing, educating and entertaining the
public without prior official censorships, or other official and unofficial
activities which curtail that liberty. All over the world, there are legal bases
33
for press freedom, which may differ slightly from place to place. In Nigeria
the legal bases of press freedom include: Article 19 of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights; Article 19 of the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights; Article 9 of the African Charter on Human and
People's Rights; and Section 39 of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria.
Lastly, we also saw that press freedom is not absolute; hence there are some
constraints, which were also listed and explained.
Post-Test
1. What is your own definition of press freedom?
2. Would you adjudge your country as one with an absolute free press?
3. Attempt the pre-test questions again.
References
1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
Aiyar, R. (1979). Quest for News, Madras: Macmillan Press.
Akinfeleye and Okoye. I (ed.), Issues in Nigerian Media History: 1900 -2000
A.D., Lagos: Malthouse.
Alabi, S. (2003). "Press Freedom: Background, Legal Bases and
Constraints" UNILAG Communication Review, 4 (1), 52-64
Daramola, I. (2003). "Press Freedom: Legal Bases and Constraints in
America and Nigeria", in R.A. Akinfeleye, and I. Okoye (eds), Issues
in Nigerian Media History, Lagos: Malthouse, 153-166
Duika, W.J., World History, Belmont: West/Wadsworth
Momoh, T. (2002). Nigerian Media Law and Ethics, Lagos Efua Media
Associates.
34
Omu, F. (1978). Press and Politics in Nigeria: 1880 - 1937, London: Longman
35
LECTURE THREE: PUBLIC OFFICERS VERSUS PUBLIC
FIGURES, NATIONAL INTEREST VERSUS
PUBLIC INTEREST
Introduction
It is necessary to make a distinction between a public officer and a public
figure and, of course, national interest and public interest. This will unfold
why the media is always interested in them and why the public interest, for
instance, has become the driving force of news.
Objectives
At the end of this lecture, you will be able to:
- know the difference between a public officer and public figure
- understand what national interest is.
- public interest and why the media are interested in it.
Pre-Test
1. What sign posts would you use to differentiate between a public
officer and a public figure?
2. Where there is no public interest, there can be no news. Do you agree?
Discuss
3. Explain why experts continue to disagree on what constitutes national
interest.
CONTENT
Who is a Public Officer and who is a Public Figure?
A Public officer or Public official is the person who holds an office in trust
for the public and earns his/her living from the taxes paid by the public. The
36
1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria provides an
exhaustive list of all those recognised as public officers in Nigeria, for the
purposes of the Code of Conduct. They are:
i. The President of the Federation.
ii. The Vice President of the Federation
iii. The President and Deputy President of the Senate; Speaker and
iv. Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives and Speakers and
Deputy Speakers of Houses of Assembly of States, and all
members and staff of legislative houses, iv) Governors and
Deputy Governors of states
v. Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justices of the Supreme Court, President and
Justices of the Court of Appeal, all other judicial offices and all
staff of courts of law.
vi. Attorney-General of the Federation and Attorney-General of each
state
vii. Ministers of the government of the federation and commissioners of
the governments of the states
viii. Chief of Defence Staff, Chief of Army Staff, Chief of Naval
Staff, Chief of Air Staff and all members of the armed forces of
the federation
ix. Inspector-General of Police, Deputy Inspector General of Police and
all members of the Nigeria Police Force and other
government security agencies established by law
x. Secretary to the Government of the federation, Head of the Civil
Service, permanent secretaries, directors -general and other
persons in the civil service of the federation or of the states
37
xi. Ambassadors, high commissioners and other officers of Nigerian
missions abroad
xii. Chairman, members and staff of the Code of Conduct Bureau and
Code of Conduct Tribunal
xiii. Chairman, members and staff of local government councils
xiv. Chairman and members of the boards or other governing bodies
and staff of statutory corporations and of companies in which the
federal or state government has controlling interest
xv. All staff of universities, colleges and institutions owned and
financed by the federal or state governments or local government
councils
xvi. Chairman, members and staff of permanent commissions or
councils appointed on full time basis
Akinfeleye (2005) adds that no matter the mode of appointment to that public
office, whether by election or selection, the public officer "has lost part of
his privacy, that is, the right to be left alone".
A public figure, on the other hand, does not earn his living from the tax
payers' money, but "by his activities, pronouncements, comments on public
issues within the community, which are of public interest, he has become a
public figure", (Akinfeleye, ibid). Thus, celebrities like popular musicians,
sportsmen, successful entrepreneurs and the like, are public figures. Both the
public officer and the public figure attract the attention of the mass media,
and rightly so, since what they do or say may have good or adverse
consequence for the society.
38
National Interest
National Interest is one concept on which experts are not agreed. It has been
defined in various conflicting ways by different experts. For example,
Momoh (2004) defines the national interest as "those interests which
Nigerians are brought up to regard as values to strive for, to live for, even to
die for". He explains further that these values have become so entrenched in
the psyche of the Nigerian that other interests must take second place. The
national interest should also override personal and group interest.
For instance, the values so close to the heart of every Nigerian are the need to
live in peace, harmony, comfort and prosperity. Anything which undermines
these fundamental legitimate aspirations should therefore be considered as
anti-national interest.
39
Both Momoh (2005) and Areh (ibid) agree that the 1999 Constitution
adequately articulates the National Interest of the Nigerian nation. This
national interest is properly spelt out in Chapter II of the Constitution, under
Fundamental Objectives and Directive Principles of State Policy. This chapter
outlines the following important things:
i. The fundamental obligations of Government
ii. The Government and the people of Nigeria
iii. Political objectives
iv. Economic objectives
v. Social objectives
vi. Educational objectives
vii. Foreign policy objectives
viii. Environmental objectives
ix. Directive on Nigerian culture
x. Obligation of the mass media
xi. National ethics
xii. Duties of the citizen.
Nor should National Interest be confused with national Security, which has come
to be seen as the use of the instruments of coercion to contain threats to peace in
every part of the nation state. This is also known as the protection of the
territorial integrity.
Public Interest
The public interest is any event, issue or development which in the judgement of
the working press, deserves to be brought to the attention and knowledge of the
media audience. Indeed, any significant thing a public officer or public figure
does, or fails to do, is of public interest. The traditional journalistic maxim is
40
that any person who accepts a public office has lost his privacy, that is, the
right to be left alone (Akinfeleye, 2005). Such a person has become a
"customer" of the newsmen and must be monitored and made accountable to the
people.
At the same time, the monitors must ensure that whatever they report about the
public officer is of public interest. This calls for integrity on the part of the
monitors and strict adherence to the professional code of conduct and legal
boundaries.
Summary
According to Momoh (2005), "there can be no greater thing in the national
interest for those who govern to do so to secure the welfare and safety of the
citizens". And how this can be done is settled in Chapter Two of the Constitution
that documents the Fundamental Objectives and Directive Principles of State
Policy. Those entrusted with the duty of serving the national interest must
be monitored. There is a popular saying that a gold fish has no hiding place.
It is for this reason that those in the public limelight, either as public officers
or public figures are constantly being monitored by the mass media of every
society. Indeed, what such people do or fail to do, have serious implications
for the society.
For this lecture, we focused on public officers, defined who a public officer is,
and presented a comprehensive list of all those recognized as public officers
in the Federation of Nigeria. The list may differ for other societies, but the
common idea is that public officers are paid by the tax payers to perform
specific duties for the state. Public figures may not be paid by the state as such,
41
but they are in the public consciousness always because they are celebrities.
Many are role models whose actions or inactions may have serious
implications for the society.
We also discussed what the national interest is. It is the aspirations and goals
of the nation, as articulated by the government at any time. In fact,
governments exist to pursue the national interest. Such national goals are
usually captured in the nation's constitution, national anthem, and pledge, and
publicized so that the nationals will know them and work towards achieving
them.
Furthermore, this lecture explained what the public interest is, and why the
mass media are always interested in them. In fact, the public interest is the
driving force of news. It is what the media conceive as the public interest
that they report as news.
Post-Test
1. Re-try the pre-test questions
2. Work in pairs to list, at least, thirty international public officers.
References
1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
Akinfeleye, R. A. (2005). "Journalistic Integrity in Political and Economic
Reporting", A paper presented at the Nigerian Press Council National
Workshop on "Reporting Politics and the Economy - the Responsibility
of the Mass Media", at The Peninsula Resort, Km. 25, Lagos - Epe
Express way, Aja, Lagos State, from October 18-21, 2005.
42
Areh, K. (2005). "National Interest and the Media", A paper presented at the
Nigerian Press Council National Workshop on "Reporting Politics and the
Economy-the Responsibility of the Mass Media", at The Peninsula
Resort, Km. 25, Lagos - Epe Express way, Aja, Lagos State, from October
18-21, 2005.
Momoh, T. (2004). Nigerian Media Laws and Ethics, Lagos: Efua. Media
Associates Ltd.
Momoh, T. (2005). "Role of the Mass Media Sustaining Nigeria's Democracy" A
paper presented at the Nigerian Press Council National Workshop on
"Reporting Politics and the Economy the Responsibility of the Mass
Media", at The Peninsula Resort, Km. 25, Lagos - Epe Express way, Aja,
Lagos State, from October 18-21,2005
43
LECTURE FOUR: THE PURPOSE OF LAW AND ETHICS IN
THE SOCIETY
Introduction
The set of rules established either by nature or human authorities with a view
to regulating natural phenomena or human behaviour within a country cannot
be jettisoned in ensuring effective information gathering and dissemination.
This lecture is, however, concerned with those laws imposed by the powers
that be for the regulation of human activities.
Objectives
At the end of this lecture, you should be able to:
understand the differences between natural and man-made laws
understand the divisions of man-made laws
discuss the general functions of law in the society
Pre-Test
1. What are the general functions of law in Nigeria?
2. Differentiate between natural and man-made laws.
3. Examine the major divisions of man-made laws.
CONTENT
Natural and Man-Made Laws
Laws are the set of rules established by nature or by human authorities, to
regulate natural phenomena or human behaviour within a given community
or country. From this general definition, it can be seen that laws fall under
44
two broad categories, that is, those which govern natural phenomena and those
which govern human activities.
Natural Laws are the laws of nature, such as the laws of the natural sciences.
An example of natural law is that which governs the floatation of objects.
Those who studied physics can still remember Archimedes principles,
which states that "if a body is immersed in water, the up-thrust is equal to
the volume of liquid displaced". Based on this natural law, scientists
design sea-going vessels. Other natural laws include the Laws of Relativity
discovered by Albert Einstein, and the Law of Gravitation, discovered by
Isaac Newton. Even the laws of Supply and Demand and Diminishing Returns
are natural laws. Also, the fact that the earth revolves and at the same time
rotates on its axis is a law which was imposed by nature itself.
But we are concerned in this study with man-made laws. Man-made laws
are those imposed by human authorities for the regulation of human
activities. Such laws include the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights
(UNDHR), various International Conventions, National Constitutions,
Statutes, Codes, Decrees and Edicts imposed by governments at different
levels and for specific purposes.
The following fall under Civil Law: Law of contract, company law,
commercial law, family law, insurance law etc. Examples of criminal
offences are: robbery, rape, murder, kidnapping, arson, obtaining goods or
money under false pretences, defamation, sedition, etc.
46
The Purpose of Law in the Society
Ewelukwa (2004:1) identifies five important contributions of law to the
society as follows:
i. Regulation of human conduct
ii. Reconciliation of the interest of the individual to that of the
community
iii. Pointing out when interests exist
iv. Man owes his dignity to law
v. Law initiates changes in economic, political, social and religious
structures.
47
Some people's interest may be at variance with those of the community. But
Ewelukwa (Ibid:2) points out that "the interest of the individual must be
balanced with the welfare of the community, for the good of all and the public
good in particular", hence there are laws.
In this lecture, we have considered the meaning and purpose of law in all
societies. It was explained that laws are the general rules that govern natural
phenomena and human beings anywhere they may be on earth. Laws are
divided into two, namely, natural and human laws. Natural laws govern
natural phenomena while human laws are those imposed on the society by the
rulers.
We also drew a contrast between natural laws and human laws. Natural laws
are ordained by God (or nature, for the theists), and are immutable. On
the other hand, human laws differ from place to place and from time to time.
Finally, the general purposes of law in the society were discussed. They are:
regulation of human conduct; reconciliation of the interest of the individual
to that of the community; pointing out when interests exist; the fact that man
owes his dignity to law; and the fact that law initiates changes in economics,
political, social and religious structures.
Post-Test
49
1. To what extent could you justify the relevance of law to a
communicator?
2. Attempt the pre-test questions again.
References
Ewelukwa, B.N. (2004). Introduction to Nigerian Press Law, Onitsha:
Maranatha Press Ltd. Pp 1-2.
Malemi, E. (1999). Mass Media Law: Cases and Materials, Lagos:
Grace Publishers Inc.
50
LECTURE FIVE: THE MEANING AND PURPOSE OF LAW
IN THE SOCIETY: ESSENCE OF ETHICS
1.0 Introduction
The meaning and purpose of ethics and why communicators should be
ethically alive to their responsibilities remains the cornerstone of this lecture.
Similarities and differences between law and ethics are also discussed.
Objectives
At the end of this lecture, the student should be able to:
- define and explain what ethics means
- discuss the similarities and differences between law and ethics
Pre-Test
1. How would you define an ethical journalist?
2. Identify the characteristics that make humans concerned about ethics?
3. ―Without a concern for ethics there will be no difference between a human
being and an animal‖. Explain
CONTENT
The Essence and Purpose of Ethics
While law consists of the laid-down rules that guide people's behaviour in
a state, the disobedience of which attracts penalties, ethics is the branch
of philosophy which deals with judgement as to the rightness or wrongness,
desirability or undesirability, approval or disapproval of our actions.
Webster Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary defines ethics as the
51
discipline dealing with what is good and bad and with moral duty and
obligation. Ethics can also be defined as a normative science of conduct
which is concerned with the right thing to do.
Let us now take these concepts one by one and discuss what they mean or
imply in their ordinary sense, at least.
a. Honesty implies telling the truth always. Honest people are
generally respected even if they are poor. The universal belief is that
52
such people will be ultimately rewarded. Hence, the popular maxim:
"Honesty is the best policy".
b. Integrity is being in a "state of entireness, or wholeness, or an
unimpaired state of uprightness, honesty and purity" (Akinfeleye,
2005).
c. Promise-keeping means discharging obligations and honouring
agreements.
d. Fidelity means being loyal and faithful to one's spouse, friend,
business partner, associate, comrade, or beliefs.
e. Fairness involves treating each person or each case equally and
according to the rules or law.
f. Caring for others is the mark of kindness and generosity
g. Respect for others is a mark of humility, tolerance and patience.
h. Responsible citizenship means being law-abiding, doing one's
civic duties, such as paying tax, voting and respecting constituted
authority and maintaining peace and tranquility in one's
neighbourhood and work place.
i. Pursuit of excellence means commitment to the highest
standards both in personal life and in the world of work. It implies
not given to the acceptance of mediocrity, and being willing to go
the extra mile to ensure that things are done properly, regardless of
personal cost.
j. Accountability means proving that one has performed one's duty
creditably and is willing to submit oneself for scrutiny.
53
From the foregoing, it is evident that only the higher animal, that is, man
should be concerned with ethics. The lower animals cannot show concern
for ethics, nor can they be held accountable for their actions.
What then are the things about humans that make them concerned about
ethics? Okunna (1995: 3) identifies the following as the characteristics of
humans which predispose them to being ethical beings:
a. Human beings are rational
b. Human beings are social
c. Human beings are learning beings
d. Human beings have feelings
At the same time, some human beings sometimes act in ways which tend
to suggest that they are just like animals, that is, behaving irrationally or
out of instinct. This is probably why the ethical philosopher, Immanuel
Kant, believes that the greatest good can be achieved if humans will follow
their rational nature and suppress their instincts.
55
their peculiar characteristics and processes. The following are the basic
differences between law and ethics.
a. Law is imposed by the outer society, while ethics is self-
imposed and self-enforced (e g. by a professional body for its
members).
b. Law has a definite effective date while ethics has no effective
date.
c. Law can expire, or be repealed, but ethics is continuous.
d. Law has more formal institutions, such as the legislature, police,
judiciary (the courts, tribunals, court-martials, etc.) penitentiary
(prison, reformatory, etc), but ethics has less formal institutions
for its formulation and enforcement. Indeed, the chief enforcer of
ethics is the conscience.
e. While morality protects a way of life by tabooing immoral
action even before it takes place, laws only provide a resource
after the deed has been done‖, according to Caster (1983).
Summary
A good man is so regarded because he is ethically minded and leads his life
in morally acceptable ways. On the other hand, a bad man is bad because he
is not morally upright. In all societies, there are standards by which actions
can be regarded as good or bad. Without a concern for ethics there will be no
difference between a human being and an animal.
56
We also listed and explained values which are essential to the ethical life.
They are honesty, integrity, promise-keeping, fidelity, fairness, caring for
others, respect for others, responsible citizenship, pursuit of excellence and
accountability.
Also, ―it was pointed out that ethics is of particular concern to humans
because they are rational, sociable, capable of learning and have feelings.
Finally, we compared and contrasted ethics with law, drawing the
similarities and differences.
Post-Test
1. What is the difference between ethics and law?
2. Discuss the ethical constructs of a communicator.
3. How would you explain ethics?
References
Akinfeleye, R. A. (2005). ―Journalistic Integrity in Political and
Economic Reporting‖, a Paper presented at the Nigerian Press Council
National Workshop on Reporting Politics and the Economy –
Responsibilities of the Mass Media‖, Held at Aja, Lagos, Nigeria,
From October 18-21, 2005.
Caster, H. (1983). Cited in Egbon, M. (2006) ―The Problems of Ethics in the
Mass Media‖, A Paper presented at the Nigerian Press Council
National Workshop on ―The Line Editor as a Gatekeeper‖ Held
at Aja, Lagos, Nigeria, from April 9 – 12, 2006.
Fromm, E. cited in Okunna, C. S. (1995). Ethics of Mass
Communication, Enugu: New Generation Books, 3-4
57
Josephson Institute for the Advancement of Ethics (2003). Resources:
Making Ethical Decisions, www.josephsoninstitute.org
Odunewu, A. (2000). ―Ethics and Professionalism‖ in Arogundade, L.
and B. Eitokpah (eds) Media in a Democracy, Lagos:
International Press Centre and Friederich Ebert Foundation, 1
Okoye, I. E. (2005). ―Public Relations Ethics‖ a Paper presented at a
Workshop organized for Public Relations Officers of the Lagos
State Government, at Alausa, Ikeja, in November 2005
Okunna, C. S. (1995). Ethics of Mass Communication, Enugu: New
Generation Books, 3-4
58
LECTURE SIX: THEORIES OF ETHICS
Introduction
Different people are likely to behave differently when faced with the
same ethical situation. This is because of their divergent ethical
orientations. An individual's ethical orientation is responsible for his
ethical response. This is why it is necessary to understand ethical
theories.
Objectives
At the end of this lecture, you should be able to:
define and give examples of teleological ethical theory
define and identify examples of deontological ethical theory
identify all the other ethical theories subsumed under the
teleological and deontological ethical theories.
Pre-Test
1. What are ethical theories?
2. Assess the difference between consequentialism and non-
consequentialism.
3. What is your reaction to the idea of ethical universalism? Why?
CONTENT
Ethical Theories
Theories are ways of explaining phenomena. Theories of ethics are ways of
explaining ethical orientations. Okunna (1995:9) points out that ethical
59
theories generally attempt to do one or a combination of the following:
explain, describe, prescribe or predict ethical behaviour or standards. They
are explanatory when they give reasons why humans take whatever moral
decisions in their dealing with others. They are descriptive when they tell us
the nature of ethics in general. They are prescriptive when they stipulate
how people should behave in certain ethical situations. They are
predictive if they indicate how people are likely to behave under certain
ethical situations.
Within each of these groups, there exist several clear-cut ethical schools of
thought. Let's now consider each school and its subgroups.
The ethical utilitarians believe that people should act in the best
interest of everyone concerned. Their catch-phrase is "the greatest good for
the greatest number". Their consuming passion is the good of the majority,
rather than the interest of a single individual. This may appear all right on
the surface. But, according to Pasqua et. al., (1990: 259), the problem
60
may arise as to the acceptable assessment of what constitutes the
greatest number.
The ethical egoists, on their part, believe that people should act in their
own self interest. Even among ethical egoists, there are two subgroups, the
universal egoists and the personal egoists. The universal egoists simply
believe that each person should act in his own best interest, while the
personal egoists believe that each person should speak for himself as to
what he wants.
61
Deontological Ethics or Non-Consequentialism
This ethical school maintains that a good action should not depend 'on the
result or consequences, but rather on its intrinsic value, hence the adherents
of the theory are called non-consequentialists. Pasqua et. al (ibid) identify
three variants of the deontological ethical school of thought. They are:
divine command theory, Kant's duty ethics and natural law theory. Let's
now consider their explanations one by one.
Divine Command
This theory maintains that whatever God commands is right, since God is
infinitely good and infallible. Conversely, whatever God forbids is wrong.
This way of reasoning is all right with those who believe in God. To the
atheists, this is a very subjective way of reasoning. And they ask the
following question: is something right or wrong because it is God's
command, or does God only command or forbid it because it is already right
or wrong?
62
A good action, according to Kant, is not good because it produces result, but
rather because it is a moral action done from a sense of duty to the moral law.
Summary
When you see two otherwise respected individuals taking opposing
sides in an issue such as abortion, for instance, you can now understand
that their ethical orientation may be responsible for the way they think. Of
course, three important factors are responsible different people's ethical
development. They are cultural background, individual differences and
situational contingencies. A good understanding of these things will make
64
for better understanding of people and their ways, and enhance peace in the
world.
Within the teleological group, there are three main sub groups. They are
the ethical utilitarians, the ethical egoists and the ethical pragmatics. All
these sub groups have their different points of emphasis which make
them unique.
Also within the deontological school of ethics there are different sub
groups, such as the divine command adherents, Kant's duty ethics
adherents and the natural law adherents. However, since the natural law
position is independent of any religious orientation, it is the school of
ethics adopted in the drafting of all international charters. Accordingly,
most of the universal freedoms enjoyed everywhere in the world today
derive from the natural law ethics.
Post-Test
1. Attempt the pre-test questions again
2. Would you say Nigerian media are ethically responsible?
65
3. Why do you think the fourth estate of the realm should be ethically
responsible?
References
Callahan, S. (2003). "New challenges in globalization for journalism"
Journal of Mass Media Ethics, 18, 13-15
Okunna, C.S. (1995). Ethics of Mass Communication, Enugu: New
Generation Books, p.9.
Pasqua, T.M., J.K. Buckalew, R.E. Rayfield, and J.W. Tankard (1990).
Mass Media inthe Information Age (Instructor's Edition), New
Jersey: Prentice Hall, 262.
66
LECTURE SEVEN: THE REGULATION OF THE MASS MEDIA
Introduction
Press freedom is the absence of prior restraints and governmental attacks on
the press and journalist for expressions of ideas, information and opinions
made in the overall interest of the citizens of a society. Press freedom is
essential to provide participation for the citizens of a society regarding the
utilization and management of their resources for improving the wellbeing
of all and sundry. The compelling reasons why the media are regulated are
examined in this lecture.
Objectives
At the end of this lecture, you should be able to do the following:
understand why the mass media is regulated the world over
know what media laws are
understand what media ethics is
Pre-Test
1. Attempt a thorough explanation of press laws
2. How justifiable are the reasons for media regulation?
3. What is mass communication ethics?
CONTENT
Why the Mass Media is Regulated the World Over
All over the world, governments regulate various fields of human
endeavour. Thus, banking, education, health care delivery, hotels, etc., are
67
regulated. This means these industries are provided with basic structures for
their operation. The mass media industry is equally regulated. However,
because of the peculiar nature of the mass media as vehicles for free
expression, which is a fundamental human right, government is careful to
regulate the media only to the extent consistent with the expectations of a
democratic society. Thus, over-regulation of the media will stifle free
expression and give rise to underground press and even rebellion.
Malemi (1999: 32) identifies four formal regulatory mechanisms of the mass
media as follows:
a) constitutional provisions
b) statutes
c) ethical guidelines
d) informal restraints.
a) Constitutional Provisions
The 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Section 39.
b) Statutes (e.g. The Official Secrets Act, Laws of Sedition, Contempt,
Obscene and Harmful Publications Act, Defamation, Copyright,
Advertising laws, National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) Code,
Newspaper Act, Media Council Decree, which established the
Nigerian Press Council (NPC), the Nigerian Television Authority (NT
A) Act, the Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria (FRCN) Act, etc.
c) Ethical Guidelines
Professional bodies provide mechanisms for the regulation of their
members, each having a constitution and a code of ethics.
d) Informal Restraints
68
Examples are beat associations and other informal arrangements which
impose certain demands on members.
Some of these new forms are: drama, phonographs, the internet and even
G.S.M. For this reason, some authors have defined Mass communication
law to mean all the laws made to govern the activities of these wide varieties
of media. For example, Malemi, (1999:3) writes:
Mass communication, media or press law, is the law governing the
receiving and dissemination of ideas and information, the Media of
mass communication, the role of press and the writing public, their
rights and their duties to the private individual and the state in general.
It has been pointed out above that the term Press is only a part of and not the
whole of mass-communication. So, media law or mass-communication
law should include all the laws governing the operation of newspaper,
magazines, radio, and television broadcasting, public relations and
advertising practices, internet, phonograph, satellite broadcasting and all
the new information and communication technology (ICT).
69
However, many authors limit their discussion of mass-communication law
to press law, as it was in the beginning. This is due to the fact that press law
is the oldest and most often brought to the consciousness of the general
public. Indeed, there are laws governing the practice of public relations and
advertising, but since the practitioners of these professions do not deal
directly with general public, not much is known about the laws governing
them.
Nevertheless, it should be pointed out that press law does not constitute mass-
communication or media law, since the mass media or mass-communication
consists of other channels in addition to the press. We shall, therefore, restrict
our discussions in this text to press law.
70
Such laws are the laws of Defamation, Libel, Slander, Sedition, Copyright
and Plagiarism.
Other laws outside these basic ones are usually frowned at by the Press and
Civil Society, since they are bound to constitute undue restrictions on Press
and freedom, which to a large extent is an extension of individual
freedom. The United States of America provides a model in this regard. The
famous First Amendment to the American Constitution which was adopted
in 1791, states in part that '...Congress shall not make any law... abridging
the freedom of the Press'. This Provision of the American Constitution is
the basis of the high degree of press freedom and individual freedom
enjoyed by the American Press and people. But most other countries of the
world, especially in the developing world, do not enjoy a high degree of
Press freedom. This is because, in addition to the laws of Defamation, Libel,
Slander, Sedition, Copy right and Plagiarism which already exist in their
Statutes, the ruling elite are always passing other obnoxious laws which
merely seek to protect the selfish interest of those in power.
In the history of Nigeria from the colonial era to end of military rule in 1999,
most Press laws were made for this purpose. These bad laws, notorious for
being retroactive and precluding the jurisdiction of the civil courts, have
been used to intimidate, harass, and imprison journalists, opposition
politicians and Civil rights advocates. Tony Momoh (2004) gives a
complete inventory of such laws.
In the following sections, we shall discuss only the laws which are
universally imposed in civilised societies, that is, the laws of
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defamation, libel, sedition, slander, copy right and plagiarism. But before
then, we need to know more about freedom of the Press, including its
legal basis and constraints.
Summary
We can see that the mass media is regulated by laws and a system of
ethics. This is despite the fact that they are a vehicle through which people
express their fundamental rights of free expression. Without some form
of regulation^ the media could be misused by unscrupulous persons to the
detriment of the society.
In this lecture, we have looked at the compelling reasons why the mass media of
all societies are regulated. Regulation means that they are checked to
some extent by laws and ethics. Specifically, the regulation comes in form
of constitutional provisions, statutes, ethical guidelines and informal
restraints.
Mass communication law, media law and press law are used
interchangeably to mean
"the law governing the receiving and
dissemination of ideas and information, the
media of mass communication, the role of
press and the writing public, their rights and
their duties to the private individual and the
state in general" (Malermi, 1999: 3)
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Media ethics, on the other hand, is that branch of philosophy which helps
the media professionals to set standards of moral conduct. It helps those in
journalism, for instance, to decide what good and bad journalism is, and what
is acceptable or unacceptable in the performance of their duties of
gathering, processing and dissemination of a wide variety of messages
designed for enlightenment and entertainment.
The lecture also asked the important question: who is a virtuous journalist?
The question was answered by foremost media ethical philosopher, John
Merrill, who says that a virtuous journalist is the one who has respect for and
tries to live by the cardinal virtues which Plato suggested in his classical
treatise, The Republic. The virtues are wisdom, courage, temperance and
justice. We went on to explain what each virtues entails.
Post-Test
1. Carry-out an assignment on the difference between journalistic ethics
and mass communication ethics.
2. Attempt the pre-test questions again.
References
Malemi, E. (1999). Mass Media Law: Cases and Materials, Lagos: Grace
Publishers Inc.
Merrill, J.C. (1982). "Ethics and Journalism", in Ethics and the Press:
Readings in Mass Media Morality, New York: Hastings House
Publishers. 10-11
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Momoh, T. (2002). Nigerian Media Law and Ethics, Lagos: Efua Media
Associates.
LECTURE EIGHT: DEFAMATION
Introduction
This lecture is concerned with discussions on the constitutional provision for
protecting the reputation of people resulting from injurious statements or
acts by others. The need to safeguard the plaintiff‘s interest in the good
opinion which other people hold of him must not be undermined.
Objectives
At the end of this lecture, you should be able to:
know what defamation is
define what Criminal Defamation means
understand the purpose of the law of Defamation
understand what is meant by "Right -thinking members of
society."
know the essentials of Defamation
Pre-Test
1. Who are ―right thinking members of the society‖?
2. Defamation can be a civil or a criminal act. Explain
3. Discuss the essentials of defamation.
CONTENT
What is Defamation?
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Defamation can be defined as the transmission to a third party, either orally
or in writing, of information which tends to damage the reputation of another
person. It is the publication of a statement, which exposes a person to hatred,
ridicule, contempt and/or causes him to be shunned or avoided by right
thinking members of society.
Experts (e.g. Ewelukwa, 2004: 209; Malemi 1999:74, etc) are all agreed that
for a statement to be defamatory of a person, that statement must be false and
calculated to:
a. Lower him in the estimation of right-thinking men; or
b. Cause him to be shunned or avoided, or
c. Expose him to hatred, contempt or ridicule, or
d. Convey an imputation on him disparaging or injurious to him in
his office, profession, calling, trade or business.
e. Injure his financial credit
Section 375 of the Criminal code stipulates that any person who publishes
any defamatory matter is guilty of a misdemeanor and is liable on conviction
to imprisonment, fore knowledge that the offending matter is false attracts
imprisonment for two years.
Section 376 states:
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By excluding the two extremes of the naive and those who may be too
sensitive, the Supreme Court seems to have arrived at the general public as
constituting right - thinking members of society.
2. Malice
Another essential ingredient of defamation is that the offending statement
must have a malicious intent. Malice is evil motive or spite. If the plaintiff
can prove the existence of a malicious intention, the defence of fair
comment by the defendant will be defeated.
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3. Damage
Damage is quantifiable loss as a result of the defamation. In a situation where
the defamatory statement is not actionable per se on mere publication, the
plaintiff must prove some special or actual damage to succeed in his claim.
4. Repetition
Though it is not an essential condition for defamation, every repetition of a
defamatory statement in writing, orally or in any other form, amounts to a
fresh publication. And this may create a fresh cause of legal action.
Repetition and dissemination of defamatory matter may necessitate the suing
of the printer, publisher, author and vendor news agent, in the case of books,
newspapers and magazines.
This is as far as the theory goes. But in practice, vendors are rarely joined
in any action of defamation, as the law views their involvement leniently,
regarding them as innocent disseminators. However, should a vendor be
joined in an action, he can easily be let off the hook if he can show that he
did not know that the matter he is circulating is libelous and that his
ignorance is not due to negligence on his part.
What is Innuendo?
Innuendo is where defamation occurs, not by the natural meanings of the
words used, but by some kind of inference or connotation. If a plaintiff
alleges innuendo, then he must establish that the particular meaning of the
word used refers to him and can be understood as such.
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There are two kinds of innuendo: true (legal) innuendo and false
(popular) innuendo. It is a mere academic exercise trying to distinguish
between true and false innuendo, since in either case the court would require
the plaintiff to prove that the matter complained about was to his discredit.
(Ewelukwa, 2004:218).
Assent to Publication
If a person assents to a publication either expressly or impliedly, then he has
no case if some people now interpret that publication to be negative of him.
It is more so if the ordinary meaning of the published matter is not
derogatory.
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Summary
It is important for journalists to understand the essence of the law of
defamation, and be properly guided in their day to day official activities and
even in their private lives. Ignorance of the law has never been and can never
be a defence. In the Colonial era, many well meaning but ignorant
nationalist-journalists were jailed because they were ignorant of the law of
defamation and how to escape it. The law of defamation is to protect the
reputation of persons from undue injury. Also, it is not sufficient to institute an
action of defamation. The plaintiff must prove the essentials of defamation
discussed in the lecture for the action to succeed.
In this lecture, we have defined and explained what defamation means in law.
We have seen the explanation of criminal defamation as well as the purpose
of the law of defamation itself. We have also looked at the essentials of
defamation. They include publication, malice, damage and repetition. Any of
these can sustain a case of defamation. We also saw the definition and
explanation of innuendo. We defined and explained what constitutes
unintentional defamation. Lastly we have seen that an indispensable
condition for the establishment of defamation is that the statement should be
such that lowers the plaintiff in the estimation of right thinking members of
the society. We then saw the definition of the expression "right thinking
members of the society," from a Supreme Court pronouncement.
Post-Test
1. Re-try the pre-test questions.
2. What is your own explanation of an unintentional defamation?
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References
Ewelukwa, B.N. (2004). Introduction to Nigerian Press Law, Onitsha:
Maranatha Press Ltd.
Malemi, E. (1999). Mass Media Law: Cases and Materials, Lagos:
Grace Publishers Inc.
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LECTURE NINE: LIBEL AND SLANDER
Introduction
Any attempt to reduce a person‘s reputation in the eyes his associates is a
flagrant violation of his right to his treasured name. Here, classes of
defamatory statements, that is, libel and slander are examined. The
determinants of vulgar abuse are also x-rayed.
Objectives
At the end of this lecture, you should be able to:
demonstrate what libel means
explain the meaning and instances of slander
define and explain what vulgar abuse means
Pre-Test
1. Define libel.
2. Define slander.
3. Exa mine the circumstances that can make the court to
dismiss a case as a mere vulgar abuse.
4. What defences to defa mation are open to journalists?
CONTENT
What is Libel?
Much as the 1999 Constitution provides for freedom of expression in Section
39 (1) and the freedom to own the media for the expression of ideas in 39
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(ii), it also provides for the protection of the right of the individual and
national security. In section 45, the constitution provides:
Nothing in section 37, 38, 39, 40 and 41 of
this Constitution shall invalidate any law that
is reasonably justifiable in a democratic
society
a. in the interest of defence, public safety, public order, public
morality or public health; or
b. for the purpose of protecting the rights and freedom of other
persons.
Definition of Libel
Thus, Ewelukwa (2004:212) defines libel as defamation by means of
writing or by any other permanent form such as video tapes, pictures,
signs, cartoons, paintings, statues etc.
What is Slander?
Slander is defamation through the spoken word or gesture. It is not
generally actionable upon mere publication. However, there are instances
where slander could be actionable per se, that is, without proof of special
damage.
They include:
1. Allegation of a criminal offence punishable with imprisonment, such
as theft, rape etc.
2. Imputation or allegation of a contagious disease which may
necessitate the exclusion of the suffered from other members of
society e.g. AIDS, leprosy etc.
3. Allegation of unchastely against a young woman.
4. Imputation of incompetence or unfitness against a workman, which
can injure him in his trade, office, trade or profession.
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What is Vulgar Abuse?
It has been pointed out by lawyers that many otherwise slanderous
statements may be dismissed by the court as mere vulgar abuse. If there is a
hot exchange of abusive words between two persons, as is often the case in
the Lagos traffic, can an aggrieved party sue and claim damages slander?
Experts say that the court will examine the particular circumstances under
which the offensive words were spoken. The court will not dismiss the
offence as mere vulgar abuse where the words spoken alleges specific
acts of wrong doing or a crime which will lead to the person being shunned
by the public or being arrested by the law enforcement agents. For
example, if a person is falsely accused of being a cocaine pusher which leads
to his being arrested and detained by the police, it will not be dismissed as
mere vulgar abuse.
Summary
It is obvious that the freedom of expression which is a fundamental human
right, and expressly guaranteed, by the constitutions of free societies, is by
no means an absolute privilege. The law of libel imposes one notable
limitation to curtail freedom of expression, aimed at protecting the
reputation of persons. Many of those abuses traded in the street may also pass
as vulgar abuse, while others indeed are quite capable of attracting actions
of slander. A wise man should, therefore, exercise restraint when he talks no
matter the degree of provocation.
In this lecture, we have looked at the classes of defamation, that is, libel and
slander. The difference between libel and slander is basically that, while libel
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is in a permanent form, slander is not. We looked the definitions and
conditions for the occurrence of both libel and slander. Lastly, we saw what
constitutes mere vulgar abuse and who determines whether a particular case
can pass as mere vulgar abuse or can be considered as slander.
Post-Test
1. Attempt the pre-test questions again.
2. Explain why slander is not generally actionable.
3. Discuss the remedies for defamation.
References
Ewelukwa, B.N. (2004). Introduction to Nigerian Press Law, Onitsha:
Maranatha Press Ltd.
Malemi, E. (1999). Mass Media Law: Cases and Materials, Lagos:
Grace Publishers Inc.
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LECTURE NINE II: DEFENCES TO DEFAMATION
1. Justification or truth
If the publication complained about is true, entirely or even
substantially, it can form a solid defence to defamation. But the onus is on
the defendant who pleads justification to prove that the publication is true.
2. Fair Comment
It is also a defence against defamation if the defendant can prove that the
publication complained about is a fair comment made in the interest of the
public. Indeed, since the constitution charges the press to make government
accountable and uphold the fundamental objectives of the Nigerian state, it
follows that fair comment made in respect of any public officer or public
figure on any matter of public interest can form a defence against an action for
defamation.
90
Ewelukwa (2004:224) insists that for a comment to be "fair comment" it must
satisfy the following conditions.
1. The matter commented on must be of public interest.
2. The matter commented on must be an expression of opinion by
the defendant and not an assertion of fact by him.
3. The comment on the plaintiff must be fair.
Indeed, the beauty of fair comment is that if a commentator expresses an
honest opinion on a matter of public interest, it does not even matter if the
opinion is wrong in that it will bring the subject of the comment to public
ridicule. It is still a solid defence against an action of defamation.
3. Privilege
Privilege means a benefit or immunity enjoyed by someone or a class of
people which does not apply to the general public. In communication,
privilege is the freedom enjoyed in certain circumstances whereby
statements can be made without the bogey of an action of defamation. As a
defence against defamation privilege is in two kinds: absolute and qualified
privilege.
(a) Absolute Privilege
Absolute privilege is the unhindered liberty to make statements orally
or in written form to the extent that anyone who feels that he has been
defamed by the statement cannot seek redress in a law court, nor can
the court entertain such as action. This is regardless of whether the
statement is false and/or malicious.
Those who enjoy absolute privilege in the courts of their official duties
include the Head of State, governors, High Court judges, magistrates, even
lawyers and witnesses, legislators. Thus no action can be brought against any
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of the above mentioned if they defame any one in the course of their official
duties. Also, communication between husband and wife enjoys absolute
privilege.
(b) Qualified Privilege
There is qualified privilege to make defamatory statements when the
person who makes it has a duty, legal, social or moral, to make it and
the person to whom it is made has a duty, legal, social or moral, to
receive it. However, the statement must have been made honestly and
without malice; for, malice defeats privilege.
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Commonwealth outside Nigeria under the Nigerian Army Act 1990
or the Nigerian Navy Act, 1990.
f) They are fair and accurate copies or extracts from any register kept
in pursuance of any law or Act which is open to inspection by the
public or any other document which is required by any law or Act to be
open to inspection by the public.
(g) Notice of advertisement published by or on the authority of a court
within Nigeria or office of such court.
4. Consent to Publication
If a person willingly invites the press to cover his function or he grants an
interview on his own volition, then the press can plead consent if the person
turns round to bring an action of defamation. However, if the publication goes
beyond the limit of the initial approval, there may be grounds for an action.
6. Res Judicata
If a case of defamation has been tried, lost and won, it will be a waste of time
to file a fresh action on the same matter. Res judicata is to say that the case
has come to a logical end and had died a natural death.
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7. Accord and Satisfaction
It shall be a defence to defamation if there is a mutual settlement
between the two parties to the satisfaction of both of them.
8. Innocent Dissemination
The person circulating the offensive matter can plead that he is ignorant of
what he is disseminating and should therefore be excluded from any legal
action. The plaintiff and the court usually exonerates this category of persons
especially in view of the fact that they cannot pay any damages should the
case be awarded against them.
Summary
Without these defences against defamation, the task of journalists and other
public affairs commentators would have been a very dangerous one indeed.
But the law has provided adequate defences to protect all those with honest
and genuine intentions in the discharge of their duties. It behooves the
responsible journalist to carefully consider the defences available in each case
before making an incisive commentary of public interest.
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In this lecture, we have looked at the defences against defamation. They are:
justification, fair comment, privilege, consent, and death of plaintiff. Others
are Resjudicata, accord and innocent dissemination. We also considered the
remedies for defamation, which include damages, injunction, retraction and
apology.
7. References
Ewelukwa. B.N. (2004). Introduction to Nigerian Press Law Onitsha:
Maranatha Press Ltd
Introduction
Sedition is a comprehensive term which encompasses all those practices,
whether by word or deed, which are calculated to disturb the tranquility of the
state as well as subverting the government and the laws of the state. From every
indication, a seditious offence is quasi-political in nature. This lecture aims at
bringing to the limelight the constitutional basis of the law of sedition as well as
its vital aspects.
Objectives
At the end of this lecture, you should be able to:
1. define and explain what sedition is
2. understand the constitutional basis of the law of sedition
3. know the important aspects of sedition
95
Pre-Test
1. What is a seditious offence?
2. How would you trace the history of the law of sedition in Nigeria?
3. Citing relevant cases, discuss the defences to the offence of sedition.
CONTENT
The Law of Sedition in Nigeria has its origin in the English Common Law.
The earliest statutory provision for the offence in Nigeria is the
Seditious Offences Ordinance of 1909 which came into force on November
6 of that year, during the colonial administration of Governor E. Egerton.
This enactment which is in many respects identical with the present law
was incorporated into the Nigerian Criminal code which operates in the
Southern part of Nigeria.
The nature and definition of sedition has been stated by many eminent
writers and jurists. However, we propose to start with the ordinary
dictionary meaning of sedition. THE CONCISE OXFORD DICTIONARY
defines sedition as agitation against the authority of a State, conduct or
speech tending to rebellion or breach of public order.
The sections of the Criminal code and the Penal code defining the offence of
sedition point unequivocally to the fact that the provisions are directed
against possible internal disorder arising from dissatisfaction with the
existing form of government or with an existing government. The offence
is directed against those who may openly censure those by whom
authority is exercised and consequently desire and demand a change of
government in an unlawful manner. Improper public criticism of the
performance of public men in the affairs of the State however mild, if it is
expressive of a failure to achieve the expected standard obviously tends to
lower such men in the estimation of the ordinary citizen.
The offence of sedition is of the same family as the common law offence
of criminal libel. Libels directed at either individuals or a group has a
tendency to lead to a breach of the peace and it is in the interest of the State
to prevent such breaches of peace. In the Irish case of Reg V Sullivan,
Fitzgerald J. describing the nature of the offence of sedition, said in part
that ―sedition as a crime against society is allied to that of treason, and it
frequently precedes treason by a short interval.‖ Sedition in itself is a
comprehensive term and it embraces all those practices, whether by word,
or deeds which are calculated to disturb the tranquility of the State as well
as subverting the government and the laws of the State.
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b) to excite the citizens or other inhabitants of Nigeria to attempt to
procure the alteration, otherwise than by lawful means of any
other matter in Nigeria as by law established; or
c) to raise discontent or disaffection amongst the citizens or
other inhabitants of Nigeria; or
d) to promote feelings of ill-will and hostility between different classes
of the population of Nigeria.
Section 51(2) is to the effect that any person who has in his possession
seditious publication(s) without lawful excuse shall be guilty of an offence
and liable on conviction for a first offence to imprisonment for one year and
for a subsequent offence to imprisonment for three years and such
publication shall be forfeited. Section 52(1) provides that the prosecution
for sedition must be commenced within six months after the commission of
100
the offence. On the other hand, Section 52(2) provides that no prosecution
for sedition can commence without the consent of the Attorney-General of
the State or Federation.
The Penal Code also provides for sedition at sections 416 to 422. Section 416
of the Penal Code is an adaptation of section 124 A of the Indian Penal Code
and is designed to cover the same grounds as the corresponding provisions
of the Criminal Code. The word 'sedition' does not appear in section 416
but the objects of the provision are undoubtedly seditious. Section 416
defines sedition thus:
Whoever by words either spoken or
reproduced by mechanical means or
intended to be read or by signs or by visible
representation or otherwise excites or
attempt to excite any feelings of disaffection
against the person of Her Majesty, her heirs
or successors or the persons of the Governor-
General or the Governor of a Region, or the
Government or Constitution of the United
Kingdom or of Nigeria, or any Region
thereof or against the administration of
public justice in Nigeria or any Region
thereof, shall be punished with imprisonment
for a term which may extend to seven years
or with fine or both.
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There are three explanations to this section.
1) The expression disaffection entails disloyalty and all feelings
of enmity.
2) Comments expressing disapproval of the measures of
the Government or the Government of the United Kingdom
or any Government of Nigeria with a view to obtaining the
alteration by lawful means, without exciting or attempting to
excite hatred, contempt or disaffection, do not constitute an
offence under the section.
3) Comments expressing disapproval of the administrative or
other action of the Government or the Government of the
United Kingdom or any Government of Nigeria without
exciting or attempting to excite hatred contempt or
disaffection do not constitute an offence under this section.
Other sections dealing with the offence of sedition are as
follows:
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shall be punished with imprisonment which may extend to three years or
with fine or with both.
Whoever has in his possession without lawful excuse, the proof of which
shall lie on him, any book, pamphlet, paper, gramophone record, tape
recording, drawing, printing, photograph, cinema or other visible or
audible representation or reproduction, the publication or exhibition of
which would constitute an offence under section 416, 417 and 418 shall be
punished with imprisonment for a term which may extend to two years or
with fine or with both.
Both the Criminal Code and the Penal Code are in pari-material in several
essential aspects. The inclusion of the Government of the United Kingdom
and Her Majesty, her heirs or successors ... in the provisions of the Penal
104
code is a reflection of the time when the Code was enacted. It is only in
the area of punishment that the two statutes differ. Whereas the Penal code
prescribes a maximum punishment of seven years imprisonment for
exciting disaffection against the persons of her majesty ... government or
constitution of Nigeria, the Criminal Code prescribes a maximum
punishment of three years to uttering, importing or being in possession of
seditious publication. Another difference is the stipulation of fine or
imprisonment or both by the Criminal code for the offence of sedition
whereas the Penal Code prescribes terms of imprisonment with fine or
with both.
Seditious Intention
The history of the law of sedition cannot be divorced from the nationalist
struggle for independence in colonial Nigeria. The imperial government,
having to contend with the growing agitation for independence
championed by the nationalists and their press relied on the law of sedition
105
to keep the opposition in check. It is, therefore, correct .to say that the law
of sedition, first promulgated as Seditious Offences Ordinance in 1909, was
used by the colonial administration to trample on the freedom of the press
as well as curtail the freedom of expression, especially in respect of the
struggle for independence.
In R V. Agwuma and Others, the so-called seditious statement was titled "A
Call for Revolution". Some of the expressions were tailored towards
directing the attention of the masses towards one common danger i.e. the
British Government." The Statement also stated that Britain has a plan to
continue her dominion of Africa at least for the duration of the third world
106
war and that we must forget the so-called difference and direct all our
energy towards the common foe or else we remain like this for another
fifty years.
Professor Ezejiofor was equally critical of the courts of the first Republic.
He commented thus:
... the Judges probably feared that an
active interventionist policy of interpreting
the Constitution in a liberal spirit would
lead to open confrontation with the
politicians and the consequent weakening of
judicial authority. Consequently, most of
them were anxious to render decisions
favourable to the government and its
supporters. Indeed, they behaved as if it was
their duty to adopt... measures of the
authorities as valid and to find arguments to
justify them.
On his part, Professor Ojo has noted:
... in conclusion, it may be said that the history of
the Bill of Rights entrenched in the 1963
Constitution and their judicial interpretation and
application do not commend them to present or
future generations of Nigerians.
The Second republic witnessed a more courageous and independent
judiciary as far as the courts' interpretation of the law of sedition was
concerned. Unlike in D.P.P. v Chike Obi which held that citizens were
not permitted to criticize the government in a malignant manner, the court in
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the second Republic case of State v Ivory Trumpet was objective. The
accused was charged with publishing seditious materials which attacked the
person of the Governor Jim Nwobodo. The charge of sedition was based on
the publication which alleged that the State Governor who was also leader
of a political party in the State was keeping and spending party money
without account and was supporting dissident minorities in the party.
In discharging and acquitting the accused person, Araka C.J. (as he then
was) made the following important remarks.
I feel no doubt that any construction of the
law on sedition in this country should be
against the background of a profound
national commitment to the principle that
debate on public issue should be uninhibited,
robust and wide open and that it may well
include vehement, caustic and sometimes
unpleasantly sharp attacks on government and
public officials.
The court was equally authoritative in State v Arthur Nwankwo which is the
locus classics as far as the interpretation of the relationship between the
freedom of expression under the 1979 Constitution and the law of sedition
as contained in the Criminal Code is concerned. In the instant case
Arthur Nwankwo who was contesting against incumbent Governor Jim
Nwobodo in the old Anambra State had published a book which
contained many uncomplimentary remarks about the Governor and his
administration. The gist of the publication was that a civilian State
Governor was corrupt. He was charged and convicted for the publication
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of seditious material at the State High Court in Onitsha. On appeal, the Court
of Appeal (Enugu Division) quashing the conviction held that the law of
sedition in its present form is unconstitutional because it derogates from the
freedom of expression guaranteed under the 1979 Constitution more so
when this cannot lead to public disorder as envisaged under Section
41(l)(a) of the 1979 Constitution.
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Defences to the Offence of Sedition
There is considerable doubt whether there is in fact any defence to a
charge of sedition. For instance, it is well settled that once it is proved that
the publication is seditious and that it was published with a seditious
intention, it is immaterial that there are other motives which are
justifiable. It has also been held that once a seditious intention has been
proved the truth of the allegations made therein will not constitute a
defence.
In D.P.P. v Obi, the learned Chief Justice in accepting that truth was not a
defence to a charge of sedition under the Criminal Code expressed the view
that it may, however, in certain circumstances be a relevant consideration
for the purpose of ascertaining or showing the real intention of the person
charged in considering the exceptions provided in Section 50 (2) (ii). But in
the Service Press Ltd v Attorney-General, it was held that "the gist of the
offence is in the intent to do one or more of the matters stated in the
definition of seditious intention, independently of the truth or otherwise of
the matters alleged in the publication complained of, the reasons for
rejecting the truth of the allegations complained of as possible defence was
given by D.C. Holland. He reasoned that the truer the allegation, the more
likely it is to inflame passion, excite hatred and contempt and probably
incite to violence.
The learned commentator observed that:
... The dispassionate pointing out of errors
may well excite hatred and contempt against
those responsible for them. And the more
111
grievous the error or defect, the more likely
it is that hatred and contempt is excited.
Notwithstanding the above, there are possible defences to the charge of
seditious publication which are hereunder discussed under various heads.
(1) Lawful Excuse, (2) Publication, (3) Possession, and (4) Attorney-
General's consent.
Lawful Excuse
It is a general principle of law, that an excuse for violating a law cannot
be asserted as a defence in a prosecution thereof. And if the crimes are
statutory there can be no common law excuse or justification based on the
so-called 'written law'. The justification must be derived from the statute
itself. In this respect, a person charged with the offence of sedition has a
number of defences open to him which may dispose of the seditious
intention.
Despite the stringent provisions of section 50(2) of the Criminal Code, the
law still recognizes the right to freedom of discussion. Thus the citizen is
allowed to make comments on public matters, and will not be guilty of
having issued a seditious publication if the only purpose of the comment
was:
1. To show that the President or the governor of a State has been misled
or mistaken in any of his measures in the Federation or a State as the
case may be or
2. To point out errors or defects in the Government or
Constitution of Nigeria or of any Region thereof, as by law
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established or in legislation or in the administration of justice with a
view to remedying of such errors or defects or
3. To persuade the citizens or other inhabitants of Nigeria to attempt
to procure by lawful means the alteration of any matter in Nigeria as
by law established or
4. To point out, with a view to their removal, any matters which
are producing or have a tendency to produce feelings of ill-will
and enmity between different classes of the population of Nigeria.
The offence of sedition under the English law is wholly embodied .in the
common law and any defence to the defence must be deduced from the
common law. Under the British law, for an offence of sedition to be
grounded, there must be an intention and the words uttered should have the
tendency to incite violence. Thus where the words do not have this
tendency, the offence of sedition cannot be grounded. In Chike Obi v
D.P.P. the words used by the accused were 'harsh and malignant' and
capable of bringing the government into disrepute and of exciting
discontent against it, by its subjects, therefore, the accused was not entitled
to the defence of lawful excuse. Thus, once seditious intention has been
proved the truth of the statement is not admissible as defence.
Publication
The question that often arises where the offence is committed by a
seditious publication is whether the editor and proprietor of the journal
will be jointly liable.
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In the law of tort, a master is held liable for all acts of his servant
performed in the course of the servant's employment. In the criminal law,
a master is generally not so liable. In the leading civil case of Lloyd v
Grace Smith & Co. a solicitor's managing clerk, without the knowledge
of his employer, induced a widow to give him instructions to sell certain
properties, to hand over the title deeds and to sign two documents which
were neither read over nor explained to her but which she believed were
necessary for the sale. The documents were in fact, a conveyance to the
clerk of the property, of which he dishonestly disposed for his own benefit.
It was held that, since the clerk was acting within the scope of his authority,
his employer was liable. Now, it is very likely that the clerk was guilty of
certain offences - perhaps larceny of the title deeds and fraudulent
conversion of the money, but it is perfectly clear that his employer could
never have been made criminally liable for those acts for which he bore
civil liability. The doctrine of vicarious liability in tort was developed in the
early part of the eighteenth century, but it was made clear by the leading
case of Muggins that there was to be no parallel development in the
criminal law.
In the offence of sedition, where the publication was not made by the
accused or under his orders, it is a complete defence to a charge of
publishing a seditious matter to show that the publication was made
independently of the exercise of his will. In Ogbuagu v Police the court laid
down succinctly what the prosecution must prove. These are:
1) that something libelous was published; and
2) that the defendant published it
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Sedition being a criminal offence, requires that only those who
participated in its commission should be held liable. Thus, the person who
wrote or published the seditious article will be bound to answer for it. The
proprietor of the newspaper will only be liable for the seditious article in his
newspaper if he authorizes it or does anything to aid the publishing of the
seditious article. In other words, the proprietor will not be liable if he gave
instructions against the publication of such seditious article.
Possession
Where a person is charged with being in possession of seditious
publication, he may not be liable if he is able to show that he has a lawful
exercise. This provision suggests that liability in respect of possession of
seditious publication is not a strict one. Thus, if the accused is able to show
that he did not know that the publication contained seditious matter or that
he was authorized to possess it, this would constitute lawful excuse.
There are two ways in which the law attempts to balance these rights.
Firstly, by imposing restraints on what is said or written before it has
actually been communicated and secondly, by punishing those who have
already written or said something. The first of these approaches is known
116
as censorship while the second are the criminal law and civil law
restraints upon freedom of expression. The criminal law restraints,
especially the offence of sedition has been fairly well dealt with
previously. Here we shall be focusing on the concept of press freedom
generally, the historical analysis of .the press in Nigeria and the
constitutional guarantee of freedom of expression.
Summary
We submit that Section 45 is a wide licence that can be utilized by the
government to frustrate journalists. For example, in the interest of defence,
a newsman could be forced to reveal the source of his information thereby
going against the cherished tradition of confidentiality of source of
information. In the same vein, the press may be denied access to some
information that ought to be made known to .the public about government
on the ground of public order. The possibilities are endless .in the hands of
an unscrupulous and insensitive government.
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Nigeria gained independence from Britain some 47 years ago. It is
surprising that despite the attainment of independence since 1960 and the
misgivings about the law of sedition which is a colonial heritage, it
continues to form part of our criminal law in the year 2007. It is submitted
that sections 50, 51 and 52 of the Criminal Code and the corresponding
seditions of the Penal Code of Northern Nigeria be abrogated. It is
noteworthy that even in Britain from where the law of sedition was
inherited by Nigeria, the Law Commission had issued a working paper on
the reform of this area of law which suggests their dissatisfaction with the
law.
Any suggestion that the law of sedition may be necessary for the
government to check the excesses of the press should be debunked. While
we may agree with Lord Kanyon that the Liberty of the press is dear to
England and the licentiousness of the press is also odious to England, we
submit, that there are enough safeguards provided in the limitations
enshrined in the current Nigerian Constitution.
In this lecture, we have looked at the law of Sedition and the important
aspects of Sedition itself. We also discussed the relevance of such a law in the
current democratic dispensation and reviewed the arguments for and against
retaining the law in a democracy. Lastly, we also looked at the Constitutional
bases of the law of Sedition.
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Post-Test
1. What constitutional provisions do you think can be used by the
government to frustrate journalists? How?
2. Suggest better ways you think the excesses of the press can be checked.
References
1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
The Criminal Code (Laws of Southern Nigeria)
Malemi, E. (1999). Mass Media Law: Cases and Materials, Lagos: Grace
Publishers Inc.
Momoh, T. (2002). Nigerian Media Law and Ethics, Lagos: Efua Media
Associates.
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LECTURE ELEVEN: COPYRIGHT, PIRACY AND PLAGIARISM
Introduction
The kernel of this lecture on copyright, piracy and plagiarism is to shield
intellectual property from being reproduced and utilized illegally so that
lawful owners of the work can enjoy the fruit of their labour.
Objectives
At the lecture of this lecture, you should be able to:
define and explain what Copyright is all about
know the kind of works eligible for Copyright violation
know the duration of Copyright and what is "fair use"
know the remedies for Copyright
Know the meaning of Piracy
Know the meaning of Plagiarism
Pre-Test
1. Account for the distinctions between copyright and piracy.
2. Discuss the works eligible for copyright in Nigeria.
3. Explain in details, plagiarism.
4. What are the remedies for copyright violation in Nigeria?
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CONTENT
What is Copyright?
Copyright is the right which the law gives an author or other originator of an
intellectual property whereby he has invested with the sole and exclusive
privilege of reproducing and selling copies of his work. It is usually expressed
in warnings like the example below in books and phonographic recordings:
All rights reserved. No part of this work
may be reproduced in a retrieval system or
transmitted in any form or by any means,
electronic, mechanical, photocopying,
recording or otherwise without the prior
written permission of the publisher author.
The essence of the law of Copyright is to protect intellectual property from
being reproduced and sold by unauthorized persons, so that the owner of the
work can enjoy the fruit of his labour. But the advancement in technology is
making it increasingly difficult to enforce copyright laws. This is because
hundreds of thousands of copies of books and phonographic materials of
all kinds can now be easily reproduced by pirates.
a) Literary works
They include writings such as novels, stories, poetry, plays, film,
broadcasts and teleplays, text books, biographies, essays, articles, etc
b) Musical works
Included here are all kinds of musical works, whether
accompanied by lyrics or instrumental.
c) Artistic works
Such as paintings, drawings, etchings, lithographs, woodcuts,
engravings, prints, maps, plans, diagrams, sculptures,
photographs, etc.
d) Cinematograph films
Films of all sorts, whether or not they can be shown as moving pictures.
e) Sound recording
Any sound recording that can be perceived aurally.
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f) Broadcast
All broadcasts via radio, television, satellite, cable, or
rebroadcasts.
However, some kinds of works do not enjoy copyright. They include but are
not limited to: letters to the editor, advertisements and titles. Also, according to
Malemi, "copyright protection does not exist in respect of any idea, thought,
fact, concept, principle, discovery, process, procedure, system or method of
operation, no matter the form in which it is expressed, illustrated or embodied
in a work."
What is Plagiarism?
Plagiarism is the unethical practice of lifting information (news, statistics,
ideas, passages, etc.) from existing materials and presenting it as if it
originated from the writer. The chief plagiarizers are students at all levels.
Frequently they "dub" copiously from books, journals, newspapers and
magazines without attributing their sources. Plagiarism is a very serious
offence in the academia, punishable by removal from the job whenever
proved beyond reasonable doubt.
Newsmen and women also commit plagiarism when they lift ideas from books
and other media without attribution. But it is in the best interest of journalists
and their mass media to acknowledge their sources, because if the story
lifted turns out to be false, the blame will first go to the original source.
Besides, since the game of the media is to be the first to come out with the
news, those who go to great extents to achieve that feat should be accorded
125
their deserved credit, in the interest of fairness. Therefore, when reporters
obtain statistics from documents to beef up their reports, it is only proper
that they should indicate the source.
Hence, Article 13 of the 1998 Code of Ethics for Nigerian Journalists, under
Plagiarism, states: "A journalist should not copy, wholesale or in part, other
people's work without attribution and/or consent"
What is Piracy?
Piracy is the illegal reprinting or reproduction of another person's work which
is under copyright. Both plagiarism and piracy are subsumed under
copyright, but differ in the sense that, by common application, piracy refers
to the large scale reproduction of the material for commercial purposes,
while plagiarism is lifting another person's ideas without attribution, and
purporting same to have originated from you.
Summary
In this lecture, we have discussed the meaning of copyright and the havoc that
copyright violation wreaks on intellectual property. We also discussed the
kinds of works that can be copyrighted, including books, art works,
photographs, films, architectural drawings, etc.
Post –Test
1. How can a literary work be plagiarized?
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2. Are you aware of any pirated materials? Enumerate them.
References
Copyright Act, 1990
Ewelukwa, B.N. (2004). Introduction to Nigerian Press Law, Onitsha:
Maranatha Press Ltd.
Malemi, E. (1999). Mass Media Law: Cases and Materials, Lagos: Grace
Publishers Inc.
127
LECTURE TWELVE: CONTEMPT OF COURT AND CONTEMPT
OF PARLIAMENT
Introduction
Journalists are expected to always respect the court and parliament in the
course of their official duties. Therefore, any act which is calculated to
embarrass, impede, intimidate or ridicule the judiciary and legislative organs
of government via action or word can be deemed to be disrespectful. To this
end, lecture twelve gives a thorough explanation of the contempt of court
and contempt of parliament.
Objectives
At the end of this lecture, you should be able to:
explain what contempt of court means
know the practical ways in which contempt of court can occur
be acquainted with one of the most celebrated cases of contempt
in Nigerian journalism
explain what contempt of parliament means
know the ways in which a journalist can commit contempt of
parliament
know why parliament cannot commit a journalist to prison
Pre-Test
1. Define contempt of court
2. X-ray any two celebrated cases of contempt of court.
3. What is contempt of parliament?
128
CONTENT
What is Contempt of Court?
The law of contempt is predicated on the absolute necessity to provide an
enabling environment for the courts and the legislature to perform their
constitutional duties without hindrance. In Nigeria, the laws that pertain to
contempt of court are the Criminal Code Act, the Penal Code Act and the
Constitution itself.
Section 133 of the Criminal Code states that any person who:
1. Within the premises in which any judicial proceeding is being heard
or taken within the precincts of the same, shows disrespect in speech
or manner, to or with reference to such proceedings, or any person
before whom such proceeding is being heard or taken; or
2. Having been called upon to give evidence in a judicial
proceeding, fails to attend or, having attended refused within
lawful excuse to answer a question or produce a document or
prevaricates, or remains in the room in which such proceeding is being
heard or taken after the witnesses have been ordered to leave such
room; or
3. Causes an obstruction or disturbance in the course of a judicial
proceeding; or
4. While a judicial proceeding is pending makes use of any speech or
writing misrepresenting such proceeding, or capable of
prejudicing any person in favour of or against any party to such
proceeding, or calculated to lower the authority of any person before
whom such proceeding is being heard or taken; or
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5 Publishes a report of the evidence taken in any judicial proceeding which
has been directed to be held in private; or
6 Attempts wrongfully to interfere with or influence a witness in a
judicial proceeding either before or after he has given evidence in
connection with such evidence; or
7 Dismisses a servant because he has given evidence on behalf of a
certain party to a judicial proceeding; or
8 Retakes possession of land from any person who has recently
obtained possession by a writ of court; or
9 Commits any act of intentional disrespect to any judicial
proceeding, or any person before whom such proceeding is being had or
taken,
Is guilty of a simple offence, and liable to imprisonment for three months.
Section 6 of the Criminal Code further states:
Nothing in this act or code shall affect the authority of courts of
record to punish a person summarily for the offence commonly
known as contempt of court, provided that a person is not
punished for the same both under the inherent powers of the court
and under the provisions of Section 133 of the Criminal Code.
Similarly, Section 155 of the Penal Code provides thus:
Whoever intentionally offers any insult or causes any
interruption to any public servant while such a servant is sitting at
any stage of a judicial proceedings shall be punished with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to six months or with
a fine which may extend to 20 pounds or both.
The 1999 Constitution also provides for contempt of court in Section
39 (3) where it states:
130
Nothing in this section shall invalidate any law that is reasonably
justifiable in a democratic society: (a) for ... maintaining the
authority and independence of courts...
Definition of Contempt
From all the foregoing, contempt of court can be defined as: any act which
is calculated to embarrass, hinder or obstruct court administration of justice,
or which is calculated to lessen its authority or its dignity, committed by a
person who does an act in wilful contravention of its authority or dignity, or
tending to impede or frustrate the administration of justice or by one who,
being under the court's authority as a party to a proceeding wilfully disobeys its
lawful orders or fails to comply with an understanding which he has given.
Contempt of court can be in two ways:
a) Contempt in the face of the court (facia curia) otherwise known as direct
contempt; and
b) Indirect contempt or ex facia curia. This is contempt committed
outside the court, so to say.
Onagoruwa appealed on the ground that the order for his detention was
unlawful, and that the alleged contempt was ex facia curia, not in facia
curia as argued by the opposing side.
The appeal court ruled that the detention of Dr Onagoruwa for contempt
was indeed improper, as he was not given a fair hearing. More so, the
contempt in question was not in the face of the court but outside the
court. The appeal court upheld the argument that the alleged contempt was
not the publication of the initial article, but rather the refusal of the
appellant to comply with the order of the court that he should make
amends for his initial contempt.
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The court further made the following landmark statement about contempt
in general:
Contempt committed ex facia curia being words spoken or acts done
outside court which are intended or likely to interfere with or obstruct
the fair administration of justice, a newspaper article apparently
prejudging a trial could clearly be prima facie contemptuous, but in
deciding whether it actually offends the law, the court should act with
caution and restraint and consider whether the hearing will in fact be
grossly affected, particularly, where the issue concerned is a civil
one to be heard without a jury, but solely by a judge, trained to assess
the evidence fairly and to arrive at conclusion based on that alone.
(Ewelukwa, 2004:151)
134
including the media, whose actions or utterances are deemed to be
contemptuous of that legislature. (The Legislative Houses and Privileges Act
defines the powers, privileges and immunities of parliament).
135
However, parliament can, and indeed, has issued warrants for the arrest of
persons who were summoned by parliament but failed or refused to show up.
Parliament can also withdraw the accreditation of any journalist who
disrespects it. But it has been the custom of parliament to exercise utmost
caution in such matters so as to avoid unnecessary altercations with the
media, since both institutions are partners in progress.
Summary
Contempt of court is aimed at maintaining the sanctity of courts so that they
can adequately discharge their constitutional duty of dispensing justice.
Every responsible citizen is duty bound to respect the courts. Journalists as
responsible citizens cannot do less. You have also seen that the laws of the
land adequately seek to prevent contempt of parliament so that the
legislative houses can perform their constitutional obligations without
interference. It behoves every journalist as a responsible citizen to accord
parliament its due respect.
In this lecture, we have looked at the bases of the law of contempt of court
from the Criminal Code, the Penal Code and the Constitution. We also
defined and explained what contempt of court means. It was also pointed out
the practical ways a journalist can violate contempt of court. A celebrated
case of contempt was cited as an example and some lessons were drawn from
it. We have also looked at what constitutes contempt of parliament and the
practical ways in which it can occur. We also answered the question
whether parliament can prosecute and jail a journalist.
136
Post-Test
1. Attempt the pre-test questions again.
2. Work in pairs and present this: in line with the theory of separation of
powers, can the parliament commit a journalist to prison?
References
Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999
Legislative Houses and Privileges Act, 1990
The Criminal Code (Laws of Southern Nigeria)
The Penal Code (Laws of Northern Nigeria)
1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
Ewelukwa, B.N. (2004). Introduction to Nigerian Press Law, Onitsha:
Maranatha Press Ltd
137
LECTURE THIRTEEN: THE OFFICIAL SECRETS ACT
Introduction
This lecture arrests the essence and purpose of the Official Secrets Acts of
1962 and 1990. Other laws which seek to protect government secrets as well
as the relationship between the Official Secrets Acts and Freedom of
Information Bill are discussed.
Objectives
At the end of this lecture, you should be able to:
understand the essence and purpose of the Official Secrets Act
know the other laws which seek to protect government secrets
understand the relationship between the Official Secrets Act and the
Freedom of Information Bill
Pre-Test
1. ―A man without sources of information is more or less like a man
without basis of freedom‖. Examine the implications of the 1962
Official Secret Act of Nigeria on the quoted statement.
2. Appraise the benefits of the freedom of Information Bill to the
Nigerian society.
3. Discuss the other laws which seek to protect government secrets.
138
CONTENT
What is the Essence and Purpose of the Official Secrets Act?
The Official Secrets Act, which was enacted in Nigeria in 1962, seeks to
prevent the disclosure to the public of any material which government
considers as classified or confidential. The Act defines classified matter as:
Any information or anything which under any system of security
classification, from time to time in use by any branch of the
government, is not to be disclosed to the public, and of which the
disclosure to the public would be prejudicial to the security of Nigeria
From the above, it can be seen that the nucleus of the Official Secrets Act is
to protect national security For, indeed, given the volatile nature of the
Nigerian polity, trouble can easily start if certain kinds of information are
freely released to the general public. Public officers are by the Official
Secrets Act barred from disclosing such sensitive material to the general
public.
139
The Official Secrets Act also criminalizes spying, espionage and sabotage of
the nation‘s strategic military and other security installations.
Apart from the Official Secrets Act, there are other laws in Nigeria which
seek to protect government secrets for security reasons. They include: the
Criminal Code Act; the Penal Code Act; The Evidence Act and the
Constitution itself: or example, the Criminal Code Act provides in Section
97 (1) that:
Any person who being employed in the public service, communicates
fact which comes to his knowledge by virtue of his office, and which
is his duty to keep secret or by any document which comes to his
possession, except to some person to whom he is bound to publish or
communicate, is guilty of a misdemeanor and is liable to
imprisonment for two years.
The 1999 Constitution states in Section 39 (3) that:
Nothing in this section shall invalidate any law that is reasonably
justifiable, in a democratic society (a) for the purpose of preventing
the disclosure of information received in confidence, maintaining the
authority and independence of courts or regulating telephony, wireless
broadcasting, television or the exhibition of cinematograph films; or
(b) imposing restrictions upon persons holding office under the
Government of the Federation or of a State, members of the armed
forces of the Federation or members of the Nigerian Police Force or
other Government security services or agencies established by law.
From the above, we can say that the Freedom of Information Bill has the
following benefits
i) It will provide access to public information or records kept by
government, public institutions and even private organizations
carrying out public functions for Nigerians and even non Nigerians
resident in the country.
141
ii) With more information available to the citizens, they can participate
more meaningfully in the governance of the country, in the making of
laws and formulation of government policies.
iii) It will promote greater accountability on the part of public officers.
This is probably the most important benefit of the bill given the
penchant of public officers to be secretive with information. Hitherto
such secretiveness had encouraged corruption and mismanagement of
public funds without detection.
iv) What is more, the bill provides that public officers who destroy
information in their custody will be imprisoned.
From all indications therefore, the Freedom of Information Bill passed into
law under the President Jonathan Administration must have amended the
Official Secrets Act of 1962 and 1970, thereby making information more
easily available while still protecting information whose disclosure will
jeopardize national security. By this bill; Nigeria has made a significant
progress in the march to an enduring democracy and sustainable
development.
Summary
This lecture has discussed the essence and purpose of the Official Secrets
Act of 1962 and l990. It has also uncovered the other laws which seek to
protect government secrets. Finally, it has x-rayed the relationship between
the Official Secrets Act and the Freedom of Information Bill.
Post-Test
1. Attempt the pre-test questions again.
142
2. Discuss the limitations to the application of the Freedom of
Information Bill
References
The Official Secrets Act of 1962
The Official Secrets Act of 1990
The Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999
The Criminal Code Act
The Penal Code Act
143
LECTURE FOURTEEN: THE OBLIGATIONS AND
OWNERSHIP OF MASS MEDIA IN
NIGERIA: CONSTITUTIONAL
PROVISIONS
Introduction
The relevance of the media to the society cannot be overstressed. Hence, the
duties assigned to the media by the Nigerian constitution and the practical
ways in which these duties are being performed are discussed. This lecture
also examines the constitutional provisions in respect of ownership of the
broadcast media.
Objectives
At the end of this lecture, you should be able to understand:
why the media are important to the political, cultural
and economic realm
the Constitutional duties of the Nigerian media
the practical ways in which the media perform
their Constitutional duties
what the Nigerian Constitution says about media ownership
why a special licence is required for the establishment
of broadcast media.
Pre-Test
1. What are the constitutional roles of the Nigerian media?
144
2. Justify why a special licence is regulated for broadcast media
ownership?
3. Examine the practical ways in which the media performed their
constitutional duties.
CONTENT
What is the Media's Relevance to the Political, Cultural and Economic
Realm?
In the so-called liberal democracies, where the free-market economy-obtains,
and government is of the people, by the people and for the people, the
mass media play essentially the same roles. A few examples will suffice
here.
McQuail (2000) identifies the media's relevance to the political realm as
follows:
a. They have become an essential element in the process of
democratic politics by providing an arena and channel for wide debate,
for making candidates for office widely known and for distributing
diverse information and opinion
b. They are now a means of exercising power by virtue of the
relatively privileged access that politicians and agents of
government generally claim from the media as a legitimate right.
145
b. They are the largest focus of leisure time and interest, providing the
shared cultural environment for most people and more so than any other
single institution.
At the economic level, the media are relevant for the following reasons.
a. Traditionally, they have been a means whereby people with goods
and services to sell can advertise their wares.
b. They are also growing as business enterprises, as media
industries are growing, diversifying and consolidating their
power in the market.
It states: "The Press, radio, television and other agencies of the mass media
shall at all times be free to uphold the fundamental objectives contained in
Chapter two and uphold the responsibility and accountability of the
government to the people."
146
The fundamental objectives of the Nigerian state, as contained in the above-
mentioned section of the Constitution, have been listed in this study.
This means that while you can establish a print medium, that is newspaper
or magazine, without any special presidential permit, such a permit is required
for the establishment of radio and television stations.
The question then is: why does one require a special licence to own and
operate radio and television stations but none to own and publish newspaper
and magazines?
148
3. Government regulates public broadcasting to ensure that it is used
responsibly in the interest of the people. In the absence of regulation,
some unscrupulous persons may misuse the media and endanger the
public good.
4. Government regulates broadcasting, also to ensure that the media
conform to the fundamental objectives of the state. In Chapter Two of
the Nigerian Constitution under the Fundamental Objectives and
Directive Principles of State Policy, the objectives of the Nigerian
nation are articulated. These are the guiding principles of the
Nigerian State which every government must endeavour to achieve.
Since broadcasting is a very powerful tool, it stands to reason that if
proper care is not taken to regulate broadcasting, these lofty ideals of
the state may be undermined.
But does it mean that the print media operates without any controls
whatsoever? Not exactly. All mass media operate within the laws which
government makes to ensure orderliness in the society. As has been pointed
out many times before, such laws include libel, defamation, sedition,
copyright, plagiarism, contempt of court and others.
Summary
You can see that the Nigerian Constitution recognizes the important roles
the mass media can play in the society and accordingly assigns them special
duties. The media are the only institution outside the three arms of government
that is so recognized by the Constitution. Therefore, to whom much is given
much is expected. It behoves media professionals to live up to the high
responsibility expected of them. They can do this by, first of all. knowing
149
these Constitutional duties, and then, adhering strictly to the ethics of
their profession in the performance of their duties.
Post-Test
1. Attempt the pre-test questions again
2. In what ways do the media serve the society?
References
1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
Akinfeleye, R.A. (2005). "Journalistic Integrity in Political and
Economic Reporting", A paper presented at the Nigerian Press Council
National Workshop on "Reporting Politics and the Economy - the
Responsibility of the Mass Media", at The Peninsula Resort, Km. 25,
Lagos - Epe Express way, Aja, Lagos State, from October 18 -21,
2005.
150
McQuail, D. (2000). McQuail's Mass Communication Theory, 4th Edition,
London: Sage
151
LECTURE FIFTEEN: ETHICAL PROBLEMS IN NIGERIAN
JOURNALISM
Introduction
In this lecture, we shall be looking at some ethical problems in Nigerian
journalism, what they mean and the various ways in which they are
committed. They include freebies, brown envelope syndrome, conflict of
interests, misrepresentation, cartel journalism and sycophancy. The purpose
and kinds of ethical mechanisms in journalism shall also be discussed.
Objectives
On successful completion of this lecture, you should be able to understand:
understand the meanings of freebies, brown envelope, conflict of
interest and cartel journalism.
Explain the purpose of ethical mechanisms in journalism
Pre-Test
1. Discuss some of the glaring ethical problems in Nigeria journalism.
2. What is the purpose of ethical mechanisms in journalism?
CONTENT
There is no gain saying that journalists in Nigeria are now being registered,
on attainment of the minimum educational qualification. But they are still
unlike the doctors, lawyers and accountants in that they do not have to pass
licensing exams. What keeps the journalist moving are his professional code
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of ethics, and his conscience. To what extent can a Nigerian journalist keep
to his professional code of ethics, and what happens to those who violate the
code?
Freebies
These are sundry gifts which are offered to influence journalists. But the
question arises: is there anything wrong with accepting ‗Christmas or Sallah
gifts from politicians and political office holders? Many top editors say a
capital ―Yes‖. Perhaps the editors are saying so from their own experiences.
They know that journalists can be influenced by these gifts to water down
and kill stories or put up news pages for sale.
Brown Envelope
It is not only reporters who take money from news sources. Sometimes news
sources receive money from the news media to give out exclusives. But
there is no doubt that money distorts both the news and the news judgment
of reporters and editor. If you interview a politician and he gives you money,
can you still behold objectivity and be fair to his adversaries?
Conflict of Interest
Conflict of interest manifests in many forms. Newspapers depend on
advertising for their survival. Struggling newspapers may place their
advertisers ahead of the integrity of their news columns, and their reporters
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cannot do anything about it. Reporters who are on the pay roll of politicians
will also have their own conflict of interest when the chips are down.
Misrepresentation
Is it right to obtain political news in disguise? The rule is that a reporter
should always introduce himself before he begins an interview. But are there
special occasions when he can break the rule? Many editors think that if the
story is important to the public, the reporter can obtain facts under cover.
But it does not end there. What about those who may lose their jobs for their
innocent mistakes of talking to a reporter when they thought they were only
discussing with a co-worker or person in need? As a rule, people deserve to
know if their opinions will be published. Obtaining news under cover is
certainly one issue that requires more discussion in today‘s journalism.
Cartel Journalism
Cartel journalism is the formation of beet associations for the purpose of
protecting mutual interests. It is unethical insofar as it leads to the
suppression and distortion of information. In fact, it is censorship, which is
an impediment to press freedom. But there is hardly any beat where
reporters have not formed such associations in Nigeria. Wise counsel is that
they can remain as welfare associations, not professional associations. Some
other ethical problems in Nigeria journalism include sycophancy, ethnicity,
character assassination, but to mention a farus.
Such ethics, according to Kasoma (1994:7), deals with making sound moral
decisions in journalistic performance which assures the presence of societal
morality that guides generally acceptable human values and responsibilities.
M‘bayo even says that journalists are probably monitored more than any
other profession. And this monitoring is done not only by journalistic bodies
but also by outsiders. In fact, there are more outside regulators than inside
ones.
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The following are the regulatory mechanisms or bodies imposed by
outsiders in the practice of journalism;
(a) civil society organisations, such as media alert, media forum, media
watch, media ombudsman, etc (M‘bayo, 2006)
(b) public reactions to media performance
(c) Legal regulations
(d) Good conditions of service for journalists
Summary
In this lecture, we have examined the major ethical problems of Nigerian
journalism. They are freebies, brown envelope syndrome, conflict of
interest, misrepresentation, cartel journalism, sycophancy and others.
Post-Test
1. Attempt the pre-test questions again.
2. In your own view, is there anything wrong if a journalist accepts gifts
from politicians or government officials?
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References
Kasoma F. (1994). ―The need for journalism ethics in Africa‖ in F. Kasoma
(ed) journalism ethics in Africa Nairobi: ACCE, 3-21
M‘bayo R. (2006). ―Tolerance, Freedom and truth: The bedrock of the ethics
of mass communication‖ A paper presented at the Times Journalism
Institute media conference Lagos, Nigeria, June 15, 2006.
Okoye, I. (2000). Newspaper Editing and Production in the Computer Age,
Lagos: Mbeyi and associates
Okunna, C.S. (1995). Ethics of Mass Communication, Enugu: New
Generation Books
Lanson, G & M. Stephens (1994). Writing and Reporting the News (Second
Edition) New York: Oxford University Press.
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LECTURE SIXTEEN: REGULATORY MECHANISMS CUM
ETHICAL CASE STUDIES
Introduction
In this lecture, we shall be looking at four self-regulatory mechanisms in
journalism: professional codes, press council, ombudsperson and peer
groups.
Objectives
At the end of this lecture, you should be able to understand the nature and
functions of the following as ethical mechanisms in journalism practice.
Professional codes
Press council
Ombudsperson
Peer groups
The ethical mechanisms imposed by outsiders
How letters to the editors serve as ethical mechanism.
How spontaneous public reactions serve as ethical mechanism
The nature and purpose of media monitors.
How adequate training and remunerations for journalists can serve as
ethical mechanism
Legal regulations as ethical mechanism.
Pre-Test
1. Examine the tiers of journalistic codes in Nigeria.
2. Trace the history of journalistic codes in Nigeria.
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3. Discuss the roles of the Nigerian Press Council, citing relevant ethical
cases.
4. What are media monitors?
CONTENT
According to Momoh (2003), if you want to give legal backing to a
profession, there are four areas to be covered. They are:
(i) A system of accreditation of members
(ii) A register of members
(iii) A code of conduct: and
(iv) A body to enforce the code.
National Codes
At the national level, there are numerous codes. There are general codes and
those for practitioners in different media, e.g. Print journalism, Radio and
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Television, Cinema etc. The oldest national code for journalists is that of the
American Society of Newspaper Editors, which has been in existence since
1923. In Nigeria, there is an umbrella code of the Nigerian Press
Organisation (NPO), made up of the Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ),
Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) and the Newspapers Proprietors
Association of Nigeria (NPAN) codes.
Momoh (2003) identified the following problems which created the need to
revise the 1979 code
(i) The NUJ as trade union and editors were not to hold offices in the
NUJ even though they pay their check off dues to it
(ii) The NUJ could not enforce its code, not being a statutory body
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(iii) The owner of a mass medium has the right to hire and fire. The
constitution provides for ownership of media and the right to hire and
fire.
(iv) The NPAN has never accepted collective bargaining and the
minimum wage for journalists.
(v) Government did not have confidence in the ability of the press to put
their live above board. This was demonstrated by the numerous
obnoxious laws and actions which sought to check the press. They
include:
Decree 4 of 1984
Newspaper Decree 43 of 1993
Newspaper (proscription and prohibition from circulation)
Decree 48 of 1993.
National mass media commission in the 1995 Draft constitution.
Threat of a press court
Arrest and detention of journalists
Threat to set up a newspaper registration board in Decree 43 of 1993.
All these culminated in the need to revise the existing code, which was done
in 1998 at a workshop organized by the Nigerian Press council. The 1998
code had the following principles.
1. Editorial independence
2. Accuracy and fairness
3. Privacy
4. Privilege/Non-disclosure
5. Decency
6. Discrimination
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7. Reward and Gratification
8. Violence
9. Children and minor
10. Access to information
11. National interest
12. Social responsibility
13. Plagiarism
14. Copyright
15. Press freedom and responsibility.
Regional Codes
These are codes guiding practice in different regions of the world. Okunna
(1995) lists some of them as:
(i) The inter-American Press Association adopted in 1926
(ii) The declaration of duties and rights for journalists, adopted by six
journalists‘ unions of the European community in 1971
(iii) The code of Arab Journalists prepared under the auspices of the
Arab league
(iv) The Charter of the West African Journalists Association (WAJA)
which was adopted in 1986.
Press Councils
Press councils are self-regulatory bodies for journalism practice, as the
initiatives for setting them up must come from the professionals or media
themselves. Ideally, press councils should be run entirely by the
practitioners, but there are those established by the government, like the
Nigerian Press Council (NPC). But the essence of a press council is to
handle extra-legal matters involving individual journalists and the media.
Ten years later, the Babangida administration received the decree and
renamed it the Nigerian Media Council Decree. This was also rejected by the
press. But the then Federal Minister of Information, Prince Tony Momoh,
himself a veteran journalist, desirous to give the Nigerian press an enduring
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legacy, held wide consultations with the stakeholders, which led to the
promulgation of the Nigerian Press Council decree in 1992.
According to a publication of the Nigerian Press Council (1998) the new
decree was designed to:
Regulate the press, to guard against abuses not covered by the existing
press laws such as inaccuracy in media reports, distortion or intrusion
into citizens‘ privacy for no valid reason, false emphasis, reversal of
facts and the treatment of crime and sex.
In other words, the NPC is a public complaint commission for journalists
where aggrieved members of the public can file complaints against the
journalists and their media organizations. But it not only handles complaints
against the media, but also addresses conducts of any persons and
organization against the press.
Below are some peer review cases from different parts of the unit published
by the World Press Institute
(http://www.macalester.edu/wpi/ethics0202.htm2003)
(i) Writing in a recent U.S journalism trade magazine, columnist Allan
Wolper asserts that, ―It is an open secret that many journalists in
Pakistan hold down side jobs with government including the ISI
(Pakistan secret service)
(ii) A reporter at the Times-Picayune in News Orleans, Louisiana (US)
questions the credibility of a local television broadcaster who is on
camera in some of her husband‘s television ads promoting him for
public office
(iii) A Time magazine article delves into the ethically questionable
relationship between fashion editors and designers. The Article
reports that many fashion journalists receive thousands of dollars
worth of free clothing and other perks.
(iv) An associated press correspondent in Bolivia resigns after a web
site reports he has a conflict of interest. The reporter made a
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speech in Las Pas in favour of a water project that could benefit a
children‘s foundation he had set up.
(v) A columnist writing for the Moscow Times.com reports that a
journalist with children, an unemployed husband and a monthly
salary of $30 (U.S) complains that she could never get by in
legitimate journalism without free-lancing ―stories to order‖ on the
side, either at the request of her boss or on her own. Made to order
stories look to readers like legitimate stories, but they are paid for
by the company featured.
Source: Ethics in the media, A presentation by the public affairs section
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for information, but are skeptical about the profession‘s commitment to
behaving ethically.
Ethical mechanism imposed by outsiders includes but are not limited to the
following:
- Letters to the Editor
- General public reactions to media performance
- Media monitors and critics
- Legal restrictions
- Regular opinion surveys
- Adequate training and retraining of journalists.
As they concern professional ethics, letters to the editor are often used by
readers to explain about unethical conducts such as biased reporting, lack of
fairness in news presentation, among others.
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Example 1
In 2002, there were public reactions in some parts of northern Nigeria over a
feature article in This Day Newspaper, on the hosting of Miss World Beauty
Pageant in Abuja. The article published a few days to the event had the
following excerpts, which the Muslim faithful considered offensive.
….As the idea became a reality, it also
arouses dissent from many groups of people.
The Muslims thought it was 1mm oral to
bring 92 women to Nigeria and ask them to
ravel in vanity. What would Mohammed
think? In all honesty, he would probably
have chosen a wife from one of them. The
irony is that Algeria, an Islamic countty, is
one of the countries participating in the
contest.
The reaction of the Muslim faithful was swift. At the last count, more than
100 people had been killed and property worth millions of naira destroyed.
Commenting on the incident, eminent journalism teacher, Ralph Akinfeleye
(2003); blamed both the writer of the article and the unruly faithful for not
showing any kind of social responsibility.
Example 2
In 2005, a cartoon published by the Scandinavian country of Denmark and
reproduced by some Western European newspapers, sparked off riots in
some parts of northern Nigeria. The so-called cartoon riots, which resulted in
the killing of hundreds of Southern Christians attracted reprisal killing of
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northerners in the predominantly Christian south eastern cities of Onitsha
and Aba.
Others include:
Centre for Media and Public Affairs
Columbia Journalism Review
Project for Excellence in Journalism
Media Channel.Org
Media Tenor
Media Centre Research Centre
News Watch Centre for Integration and Improvement
Slip Up Com
The Tyndall Report
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Adequate Training and Remuneration for Journalists: Ethical
Mechanism
Adequate training for journalists has long been identified as an effective
mechanism for ensuring and maintaining ethical standards. Journalism has
come a long way from the days when all the skill needed to practise it was
picked up on the job. It took the academic world a long time to accept
journalism as a discipline to be studied in the university.
Woo (2003), tells the story of how the initial offer by Joseph Pulitzer to fund
a department of journalism at Columbia University was rejected. Woo
writes:
With time, however, the need for adequate formal training was appreciated
by the academia and wider society. And so began the war against unethical
behaviour by journalists. Formal training enables the journalist to acquire the
skills as well as the legal and ethical preparation for the job. And anyone
who has had a stint in journalism practice in Nigeria at least, must have
noticed the correlation between high ethical conduct and education.
Similarly, it is also believed that the poor conditions under which many
Nigerian journalists operate partly account for the unethical behaviour of
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some bad eggs. Consequently, it has been recommended at every conference
and workshop for practicing journalists that employers of journalists in the
country should improve their working conditions as a way nipping
misconduct in the bud.
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The complainant alleges:
a. That the article was sent in December 1 992and published in August
1993 and between the time lapse, significant political developments
had taken place in the country which made nonsense of the original
aim of the article.
b. That the publication of the said article, ―Lets join hands with IBB‖ Ji
august 12 1993, page 11 in the forum column of the Daily Times was
to achieve the papers political ends, thereby portraying the writer as a
member of the Association for a Better Nigeria - (ABN).
c. That the article had not only embarrassed the writer, but had brought
him to contempt and ridicule among his friends and relatives, and
subsequently led to the loss of his job in TELL Magazine.
d. That the said article was deftly edited such that the writer‘s words
which read ―remaining few months‖ were changed to ―remaining
period‖ when it was only 14 days for TBB to quit office.
The council examined the submissions of the Daily Times through a letter
signed by its legal officer, Mr. T. Tamunekenbia. The content is hereby
summarized as follows
a. That Mr. Ayodele Kupoluyi had complained to the Daily Times
sometime last year about the article he sent and was published by the
paper.
b. That the Daily Times in reply to the complaint had written the
complaint solicitors, Messrs. Onabanjo and associates of 23, Alabi
street, Gbagada estate in which it averred, among others, that,
(i) That article subject of your clients complaints bore no date and there
was no specific request or instruction from your client as to the
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specific time within which the article should be published.
Therefore, your client‘s claim that he sent it in December 1992
becomes irrelevant.
(ii) We suppose you know and your client too knows that an editor has an
unqualified privilege to publish any article sent in by any
contributor at a time he deems fit. He also has the sole privilege of
casting a head line he deems fit for such articles.
(iii) The headline of the article was from the first sentence of the last
paragraph in your client‘s article.
(iv) That the Daily Times had in fact offered in his letter to the
complainants solicitors to publish an apology if he says that he was
sorry for the words and belief he held as at the time he authorized
it to publish his article.
(v) That the Daily Times maintained that its choice of date in publishing
Mr. Kupoluyi‘s article was not actuated by malice, bad faith or ill
motive, as the complainant was not known to us in person
(vi) That it was not within the paper‘s knowledge that Mr. Kupoluyi
was a reporter with Tell magazine.
Adjudication
Having scrutinized the submissions of both Mr. Kupoluyi and the Daily
Times, Council observed that the article was sent to the Daily Times with a
covering letter dated December 13, 1992. A photocopy of the covering letter
accompanied the letter of the complaint sent to the Nigerian Press Council
by Mr. Kupoluyi. This contradicts the claim of the Daily Times that the
article bore no date.
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The council is of the view that an article received in December ought not to
have been published eight months later particularly when the editor knew
that within that period, significant political developments had taken place in
the country to probably warrant the writer to have a change of views.
The council is of the view that the action of the Daily Times in publishing
the material eight months after it was sent to it, knowing fully well that
political events in the country during that pEri9d did not tally with the spirit
of the article, is unethical and culpable The council recommends that the
Daily Times should apologize o the complainant in such a way as to reflect
that the paper meant no harm in publishing the opinion at the time it did.
However, a few assertive statements were made in reply of the legal officer
of the daily times and it is necessary to comment on them for the guidance of
the professionals:
a. Time to publish a contribution.
A contribution to a paper is meant to be published to reflect the
opinion of the contributor at a time the issue being discussed is still in
focus or current. Like in a court proceeding, the publication should be
contemporaneous to the subject matter of comment. Every editor
knows that contributions sent to them are meant to address issues that
are current either by way of news published or an on-going discussion
of public interest. Once the matter is out of focus, it is said to be stale.
b. Editor’s right to publish.
The right of an editor to publish any contribution is affected by the
right of the contributor not to be misrepresented through editing the
contribution out of context or publishing the contribution at a time
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when the contribution will no longer be contemporaneous with the
events that gave rise to it.
c. The headline cast for a story must reflect the content and import of the
story and should not be meant to over-dramatize a point a contributor
intends make.
Council does not agree that it is ―unethical‖ to apologize for publishing what
a contributor sent if such a publication was made eight months after it was
sent and the time lag was such as would have made the contributor believe
that the contribution was not going to be published the time he expected.
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c. That Alhaji (Dr) Garba Hamza was paying more attention to the visa
racketeering because of his recent financial problem which
necessitated the auctioning of the property by John Knight Finance
Limited, Ikoyi, Lagos.
d. That those visa seekers who could not pay for the quick service are
referred to Prince Tijani who charges about N15, 000. That Prince
Tijani who calls himself commander-general, spoke to the Fame
correspondent who posed as a client and emphasized that if the visa
was not granted, the part payment would be refunded.
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Adjudication
The council noted the refusal of fame magazine to respond to its inquiries
and resolved to go on with the adjudication in accordance with section 9 (1)
(c) and (d) of its enabling law which empowers it to consider and deal with
any matter referred to it in the absence of any party who has been duly
summoned to appear before it.
Having reviewed the complaint, the council:
a. Views as reprehensive the refusal of fame magazine to respond to its
letter and reminder requesting the magazine‘s reaction to the
complaint of Athaji (Dr.) Garba Hamza over two publications namely:
―G. N. Hamza in visa scandal‖, of September 28 — October 4, 1993
edition respectively;
b. Notes that the refusal of the magazine to respond to council‘s
inquiries could leave the innocent bystander with no choice than to
conclude that the magazine has something to hide or is clearly in the
wrong.
c. Stresses that the code of conduct of the Nigerian Union of Journalists
emphatically states that it is the duty of every journalist to correct any
published information found to be incorrect;
d. Invites the magazine‘s attention to the fact that failure to respect this
ethical imperative could open the profession to ridicule and dash the
hope of those who look up to the press as a credible source of
information through which public officials can be held accountable
for their actions; and
e. Re-emphasizes that there is nothing wrong or harmful for the press to
open up or make restitution if its reports turn out to be incorrect.
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In conclusion, council‘s view is that failure on the part of any publication
complained against to react to its inquiries in the bid to adjudicate on the
matter is not just a slap on the council but a disservice to the profession of
journalism and may well undermine the present 4attempt for discipline to be
maintained through moral suasion. Council, therefore, condemns in the
strongest terms, the negligent attitude of Fame and directs that in the absence
of any facts to the contrary, a retraction of the publication as requested by
the complainant be made within one month of the release of this decision.
Mrs. Obasanjo said that the falsehood published about her was titled ―Taiwo
Obasanjo Battered, Disgraced and Humiliated‖, In this story, it was alleged
that she went to Ota to pick up her children after General Obasanjo was
arrested in June and that the three wives of General Obasanjo beat her up
and threw her out of the farm, while she abused and threw stones at them.
She urged the council to conduct an independent investigation, adding that it
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would find out that General Obasanjo never kept two women under the same
roof and there was no wife living in Ota where her children were in boarding
school.
The complainant stated that the second misinformation published about her
was titled ―Taiwo Obasanjo falls in love again‖, she said that in the story,
Fame alleged that she was seriously in love with one Mr. Odiakose‖.
Mrs. Obasanjo demed knowing any man with such a name, adding that it
was further alleged that she attended her church activities with the
―unknown Mr. Odiakose‖ and she broke up the relationship ―between Mr.
Odiakose and his pregnant journalist woman‖.
The council acknowledged her complaint on November 17, 1995 and
notified Fame of Mrs. Obasanjo‘s complaint requesting it to state its side of
the matter.
On November 24, 1995, council received Fame letter dated November 22,
acknowledging receipt of the complaint. The editor, Mr. Remi Akintunde-
Johnson said that in spite of the fact that ―we are ready to comply with your
instructions, we want to notify the press council that the complainant, Mrs.
Obasanjo, has gone contrary to the council‘s handbook of instruction which
provides for complaining ‗only when you are satisfied that you have invited
the attention of the medium concerned to what you deem objectionable; and
you are not satisfied with the way the matter was handled by the medium‘.
The magazine stated that the only letter received from Mrs. Obasanjo was a
copy of the letter addressed to the Executive Secretary of NPC dated
November 3, 1995, which it received on Wednesday November 15, 1995. It
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said that a day after, it received a strongly worded notice (on Thursday
November 16) from the chambers of Adesuyi Olateru-Olagbegi & Co.
lawyers to Mrs. Obasanjo. The notice, Fame averred advised it to publish an
apology on or before November 27, 1995 as well as pay the sum of one
million naira to be dispersed to charity homes. The magazine also claimed
that the legal firm said that a libel suit of 5 million naira would be instituted
against it if it failed to carry out the request.
Mr. Akintunde-Johnson urged the council to note that Fame next date of
publication was November 27. The editor concluded that from the foregoing
and in consonance with the council‘s established patterns of adjudication,
the magazine was not in the position to adequately respond to the notice.
The council wrote a letter to the complainant requesting to know in writing
if she had decided to handle the matter simultaneously in court. Her attention
was invited to the fact that council‘s procedure precluded it from handling
any matter before the court or from entertaining legal representation.
The editor explained that the magazine‘s February 21, 1995 edition
―catalogued unabashed romantic notes between her and her lovers‖. He said
that the complainant opened the can of worms through a-28-page
documentary she sent to Today choice magazine detailing several escapades
and preferences of controversial publisher, Dr. Daboh. Mr. Akintunde-
Johnson said that the story in Today’s choice was one-sided and thus
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approached Daboh, who readily presented countless letters, love-notes, cards
and assorted materials lovers to the magazine. Furtherm2re, he said Dr.
Daboh‘s two page exposure in Fame‘s February 21, 1995 edition was
entitled, ―it‘s true, is it a crime to be in love?‖
Fame, the editor maintains, stands by its story that ―Taiwo Obasanjo was
battered‖ contrary to the position of the complainant that it was false. He
explained that the Obasanjo family had been scandalized since the escapades
of Taiwo were published, adding that they (Obasanjo family) had an
opportunity to deal with her when she came to Ota. ―There is absolutely no
doubt that Mrs. Taiwo Obasanjo was forcibly stopped from seeing her
children‖, he maintained. He said that ―complainant had once shown us the
General‘s angry letter of instructions forbidding her from moving near her
kids, Bunmi and Junwo‖.
On the latest story: ―Taiwo Obasanjo falls in love again‖ (October 3, 1995),
the editor said that the magazine had suspected that Mrs. Obasanjo and Ben
had more than a casual relationship since August 1994. He said the paper‘s
society reporter once wrote a short one-paragraph story in its famous
people‘s page of August 30, 1994, ―I wonder what sort of stunt Mrs. Taiwo
Obasanjo was trying to perform a few weeks back. Mrs. Obasanjo, a born
again Christian, was in the car when his driver sped at top speed near her
Ikeja home. That was not the story, however. The car stopped suddenly at a
side street near German Friendship specialist clinic, reversed a few meters
and before you can say Oba.. A man wearing an agbada had jumped into
back seat and the car sped off.
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The reporter, Mr. Akintunde-Johnson said, could only recognize the lady,
but on September 27, 1994 after some investigation he revealed in follow-
up: ―Remember the gist about Mrs. Taiwo Obasanjo, wife of former head of
state, General Olusegun Obasanjo, one Chief Ben, a Delta state indigene. He
is actually a class mate of the born-again lady. In fact, he‘s regular at her
Ikeja (Lagos) home‖. The editor further explained that their source informed
them about a ―new affair‖ between Mrs. Obasanjo and another man, they
only took a fleeting interest. But after studying the story outline, they
decided to work on it because the source was very reliable.
Decision
Council after deliberating on Mrs. Obasanjo‘s complaints and Fame‘s
response:
a. Notes that the weekly has pleaded justification by citing the widely
published liaison between the complainant and Mr. Godwin Daboh
Adzuana which it believed had downgraded her reputation. ,
b. Believes that by pleading justification in view of the much publicized
affair between the complainant and Mr. Daboh and the arguments
canvassed by its editor in his letter to council, the magazine is, in
effect adopting the trite legal dictum that a person cannot defend a
reputation which he does not possess in the first place
c. Notes that because the press had a right to comment freely, fairly and
honestly on any matter of public interest, it is the exercise of this right
that press councils safeguard when dealing with complaints of unfair
reporting.
d. Invites attention to the fact that freedom of speech, whether it be
spoken, the written or the printed word in freedom under the law. The
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law balances the right of the individual to his reputation against the
equally important right of the individual to his reputation against the
equally important right to express views honestly and fearlessly on
matters of public interest.
Council also notes that in a letter dated March 13, 1997, Fame was requested
to narrow its defence to the substantive issue raised in the complaint, which
is that the complainant was battered and humiliated and that she had fallen in
love again. It, however, decided to proceed with the matter when it did not
receive Fame’s response.
Council therefore holds that the report was a clear case of Journalistic
hounding.
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Case Study 4: Malice
(This is yet another complaint adjudicated by the NPC)
The Editor was in no doubt that all that was necessary to be done before the
story could be published had been done. The council made some
observations on both the allegations by the government of Imo State and the
reaction of the editor of the Examiner Newspaper.
185
On the allegation that the Examiner‘s publication was malicious because the
government had denied patronage to the paper, Council said it was unable to
establish the malice. It noted that the patronage sought was not unusual in
media establishment and operation. The request of the Editor- in-chief to the
Imo State Government that his newspaper be listed for advertising and
subscription was, in the view of council, a legitimate business request.
Council noted that the newspaper published not only a reaction to the story
complained of but an interview with the Government which was favourable.
On the defense by the Editor that the story was fit for publication, council
disagreed. A story of that seriousness would be fit for publication only if all
the verifiable had been verified or if the occasion making of the allegation
was privileged. There was no proof that the newspaper had facts to prove
that the Governor and his wife collected Nl00million and spent it in buying
two houses in the United States of America. The story was even more
suspect when the legislator interviewed by the newspaper claimed that the
allegations he made were based on the information his bother in the United
States gave him.
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The above issues have remained on the front burner of discourse on
journalistic ethics in Nigeria since Stephen Farris, a TIME journalist, visited
the country earlier in 2002 and reported on corruption in the media. In the
article, ―The whole Truth.‖ (TIME, International edition, April 14, 2002),
Farris cited an incident where the federal government bribed foreign
journalists to influence their coverage.
The report embarrassed the government that took off in May 1999 by
declaring war on corruption and public officials who are guilty of graft.
President Obasanjo set up a committee headed by the Attorney General and
Minister of Justice, Mr. Kanu Agabi, to probe Farns‘ allegation.
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While some sections of the media berated the Minister for bribing foreign
journalists, others thought the gesture was a defensible public relation
initiative. Here is &w one journalist, Waziri Adio, columnist for the
Thursday Newspaper puts it: ―This is where the real danger lies. We have
come to the day that too many journalists see nothing untoward in the action
of the government... That is the real insult and embarrassment, not Mr.
Farris‘ report. ―The journalists did not receive an ―honorarium‖, because an
honorarium is for a service rendered. Any respectable news organization
should pay for gathering news.
Moreover, the fact that it is a common practice does not make it right, and
the intention of the giver is not the issue. What matters is that journalists
follow a code of ethics. Finally, the fact that it is done openly does not make
it right. It only shows how large the problem has become. The panel‘s report
e4xonerated the Information Minister and tried to weaken the credibility of
Farris‘ report. It said the ministry had informed each invited journalist that it
would reimburse their expenses. The payments were to honor this pledge. It
claimed that this was the practice all over the world by international
agencies such as the UN and the United States Information Service (USIS).
The panel accused Farris of coming to Nigeria to engage in the defamation
of Public officials, and noted, ―it is a criminal offence to publish such
malicious falsehoods.‖
The report claimed that only two reporters declined the money on the
grounds that they were in Abuja for another assignment, and only one
reporter returned the money later. It also claimed that Jeff Koinange
collected the honorarium and ―there is no evidence that he returned the
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money.‖ Neither Koinange nor CNN publicly refuted the claim at that time.
But, in response to my inquiry, Koinange told me that he had returned the
money and described the report as an attempt to scapegoat him. A CNN
public relations spokesman categorically denied the accusation. In addition
to CNN only two foreign media, Reuters and AP, announced that they had
rejected the money. That leaves quite a crowd of sinners.
Summary
You can see that the essence of self-regulatory mechanisms is for
journalistic insiders, as it were, to handle issues which arise from time to
time in the media, without the interference of outsiders. All over the world,
the other professions have similar arrangements for regulating the ethical
conduct of their members. This is to ensure that they continue to serve the
best interest of the society and that the bad eggs among them will not drag
the name of the profession in the mud.
Post-Test
1. Attempt the pre-test questions again.
2. In what ways is the Nigerian Guild of Editors different from the
Newspapers Proprietors Association of Nigeria?
References
Akinfeleye, R. (2003). ―Fourth Estate of the Realm or Fourth Estate of the
Wreck: Imperative of Social Responsibility of the Press‖ An
Inaugural Lecture, University of Lagos.
M‘bayo, R. (2003). ―Tolerance, Freedom & Truth: The Bed rock of the
Ethics of Mass communication‖ A Paper Presented at the Times
Journalism Institute Media Conference, Lagos, Nigeria, June 15,
2006.
Momoh, T. (2002). Nigerian Media Law and Ethics, Lagos: Efua Media
Associates.
Nigerian Press Council (1998). Ethics in Nigerian Journalism, Abuja:
Nigerian Press Council.
Okunna, C.S. (1995). Ethics of Mass Communication, Enugu: New
Generation Books
Seib, P. and K, Fitz-Patrick (1977) Journalism Ethics, New York: Harcourt
Brace College Publishers.
U.S. Consulate General (2003) Ethics in the Media, Lagos: A Presentation
of U.S. Public Affairs Section
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Woo, W. (2003) ―Journalism and Serving the Public Trust‖ in Ethics in the
Media, A Presentation By the Public Affairs Section, U.S. Consulate
General, Lagos
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LECTURE SEVENTEEN: HOW POWERFUL IS THE PRESS?
Introduction
An indispensible follow-up to freedom of expression and the press is the
constitutional provision that guarantees free flow of information gathering,
education and dissemination. There is nothing as good as a virile
environment that enforces freedom of speech and the press. Freedom of
speech and the press should not be jettisoned with a view to ensuring the
down of a virile nation.
Objective
At the end of this lecture, you should be able:
1. appreciate the watchdog role of the press in relation to information
dissemination and nation-building.
2. appraise the strengths and weaknesses of the press.
3. discuss various instances where the press has held the leaders of men
responsible for their actions.
Pre-Test
1. How would you justify the assertion that ―the pen is mightier than the
sword‖?
2. Discuss the factors responsible for pres assaults?
CONTENT
It is a common saying that the pen is mightier than the sword. Napoleon
elaborated this concept when he wrote ―Four hostile newspapers are more to
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be feared than a thousand bayonets‖. There is no doubt that only a few who
have seen the sword and the bayonet in action would consent to these
statements and only a novice would opt for the bayonet or the sword in lieu
of a pen.
Now comes the priceless question: Is the pen really mightier than the sword?
These instances might tend to justify it. Richard Nixon was President of the
United States of America. He was caught in a Watergate scandal by Bob
Woodwork and Carl Bernstein, the two reporters of the Washington post.
The ground under him gave way and he dropped down the cliff of his power
into the valley below, his place in the political life of his country became
uncertain while every effort made by his supporters to ensure his re-election
met its waterloo.
The German sociologist and political scientist, Max Webber, defines power
as ―The possibility of imposing ones will upon the behaviour of other
persons‖. If this is power, then the press has power. Its influence on every
democratic and autocratic society is pervasive. For good or bad, the press
imposes its decisions, views and opinions on the rest of the society. It
dictates public taste. It decides what the public should know, how and when
it should know it. It decides what is fair enough for public consumption. The
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press, in carrying out its primary responsibilities of informing, educating and
entertaining, reserves the right to dispense its wisdom as it deems fit.
Perhaps, this is a narrow concept of power as there is something much
fundamental. This is not power but the myth about power. Nevertheless, the
written or spoken word is a power instrument for social change. Therefore,
anyone with a monopoly of the means or the medium by which the system
or the written word is disseminated can be said to have, and exercise, power.
This may be real in other institutions. But such powers or its exercise by the
press is severely curtailed by the factors beyond the control of the press
itself. It must be noted that the press, by its nature, is a vulnerable institution.
It is vulnerable by the nature of its ownership, its audience as well as by the
political Institution. It is vulnerable to commercial manipulations of
individual; it is vulnerable to the anger and frustrations of individual group
of persons. The forceful closure of New Breed, closure of News Watch, The
Guardian, The Punch, The News, The Tempo and the Imprisonment of
Journalists at various times under various governments in Nigeria, all
confirm the limited power of the press. In addition, the power of the fourth
estate of the realm is inhibited by various conventions and laws that watered
down its biting strength.
Part of the problems of the press is that it is on a struggle for power. The
right to inform carries with it the power to influence beliefs and cause
ground to be shifted. Everyone resents this and so does any government.
Walker opines that ―a government, by definition, is sovereign in its country.
Hence, an independent and often critical voice, with daily and direct access
to the public must be a limitation on the sovereignty‖. Nevertheless, despite
all these, the press remains unique in converting its powerlessness into a
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virtue because the press as a centre of social interaction imposes its
imperative on every society. No one can do without it. Berate it, suppress it.
Manipulate its liberty; the press still remains a pain in the neck of the
society. It remains the only institution that has the privilege of the last word.
No wonder, its ―romance‖ is often sought after by various governments even
if the friendship will later turn sour.
Post-Test
1. Why do you think the romance of the press is often sought after by
various governments?
2. To what extent does the press decide what the public should know?
References
Ayandele F. (2005). The Secret of an Achiever. Kano: Government Printer.
Ayandele, A.D. The Role of the Press in a Democratic Society: A Study of
the Nigerian Fourth Republic: B.A. Project, 2004.
Okunna, C.S. “The Ethnical Journalist as the Bastion of Democracy”, The
Nigerian Journal of Communication. November 2001, Vol. 1, No 1.
Olaore, T. (1998). My Stewardship. Lagos: Tee and Tee Communication
Agency.
Udoakah, N. (1998). Government and the Media in Nigeria. Calabar:
Century Publisher.
Yakubu, A. (1999). Press Law in Nigeria. Lagos: Malthouse Press Limited.
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