A series of arrests of bloggers, newspaper reporters and even a dog owner has advocates worried about a chill on freedom of expression in Nigeria.
While the constitution of Africa’s most-populous country guarantees freedom of speech and the press, Peter Nkanga, West Africa representative for the Committee to Protect Journalists, said those rights are under attack.
“More and more, that freedom is being eroded,” Nkanga said. “How is it being eroded? By the actions of government institutions and government authorities, who are ensuring that that freedom of expression, that freedom of the press that freedom to hold opinion, gradually, steadily, is being eroded.”
Nkanga pointed to a number of episodes in recent months as instances where Nigerian security forces went after people simply because of something they said or wrote.
A journalist investigating arms smuggling was assaulted in June after a meeting at a Nigerian border post. Nkanga said customs officers looked on as the journalist was attacked without intervening.
Musa Azare, a blogger known for being critical about the government of Bauchi state in the country’s northeast, also found himself under arrest this month.
"“They were dispatched from Bauchi to come and arrest me,” Azare said of the police officers who travelled 450 kilometres to his house in the capital, Abuja."
He was driven to Bauchi and told that he was being taken in on suspicion of cyber stalking and criminal defamation, before being released. A Bauchi state official denied the government had anything to do with Azare’s detention.
It’s not just journalists that are facing threats. Police took a man in the south-western Ogun state this month into custody for naming his dog “Buhari,” after the president.
This month, the army said it wanted to question a journalist who had posted a link to a video released by the Boko Haram extremist group
While the constitution of Africa’s most-populous country guarantees freedom of speech and the press, Peter Nkanga, West Africa representative for the Committee to Protect Journalists, said those rights are under attack.
“More and more, that freedom is being eroded,” Nkanga said. “How is it being eroded? By the actions of government institutions and government authorities, who are ensuring that that freedom of expression, that freedom of the press that freedom to hold opinion, gradually, steadily, is being eroded.”
Nkanga pointed to a number of episodes in recent months as instances where Nigerian security forces went after people simply because of something they said or wrote.
A journalist investigating arms smuggling was assaulted in June after a meeting at a Nigerian border post. Nkanga said customs officers looked on as the journalist was attacked without intervening.
Musa Azare, a blogger known for being critical about the government of Bauchi state in the country’s northeast, also found himself under arrest this month.
"“They were dispatched from Bauchi to come and arrest me,” Azare said of the police officers who travelled 450 kilometres to his house in the capital, Abuja."
He was driven to Bauchi and told that he was being taken in on suspicion of cyber stalking and criminal defamation, before being released. A Bauchi state official denied the government had anything to do with Azare’s detention.
It’s not just journalists that are facing threats. Police took a man in the south-western Ogun state this month into custody for naming his dog “Buhari,” after the president.
This month, the army said it wanted to question a journalist who had posted a link to a video released by the Boko Haram extremist group