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| Tony Amokeodo and Chibuzo Ukaibe |
MRA
called for the immediate and unconditional release of the journalists, saying
it had issued a global alert on the matter through the mechanism of the
International Freedom of Expression Exchange (IFEX) to call international
attention to the situation of the journalists whom it said were simply being
harassed for exposing the government’s political machinations.
Mr. Amokeodo, the Group News Editor of Leadership newspaper and
Mr. Ukaibe, a Political Reporter, were re-arrested when they reported at the
police station in compliance with Police bail condition that they report daily
at the police station.
The duo were first detained and held for nearly
two days on April 8, after they honoured a police invitation.
They are currently being detained at the notorious Special
Anti-Robbery Squad detention facility in Abuja and their mobile phones have
been confiscated.
Reports
say the journalists are being held incommunicado by the police for refusing to
disclose the source of the stories published by their newspaper about two weeks
ago.
MRA’s
Deputy Executive Director, Ms Jennifer Onyejekwe, described the action of the
Police as “sheer abuse of power”.
She
said: “The police know that they have no power to hold the journalists for more
than 24 hours without a court order. They have therefore resorted to
undermining the Constitution by detaining them, releasing them and again
detaining them. This is sheer abuse of power and we are calling on the
global freedom of expression community to condemn this high-handedness on the
part of the Nigerian Government and its law enforcement agencies.”
Ms
Onyejekwe observed that it was clear from the circumstance that the Police had
no evidence of wrongdoing against the journalists and had resorted to a
strategy of harassment and intimidation to wear the journalists down and
prevent them from carrying out their professional duties.
She
reiterated MRA’s call on the Police to charge the journalists to court if they
have any case against the journalists or allow them to carry out their
professional duties without harassment and intimidation.
Ms
Onyejekwe reminded the Police that media have the constitutional duty to hold
government accountable to the people and warned the police not to allow
themselves to be used to encumber them in carrying out that duty.
For
further information, please contact
Ayode
Longe
Programme
Manager
Media
Rights Agenda
Email:
ayode@mediarightsagenda.net
Mobile:
+2348023298628

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