On January 19, Nigerians woke up to a shocking newspaper advert.
Splashed across the front pages of two national dailies, The Sun and The
Punch, were texts and images suggesting that Muhammadu Buhari, then
presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress will die in
office if elected president.
Although Mr. Buhari, 72, went ahead to win the election, the advert,
sponsored by Ayo Fayose, the controversial governor of Ekiti State, is
widely regarded as one of the lowest moments in the run-up to the
recently concluded general election.
Hate speeches and campaigns were a major feature of the 2015
election, but the morbid advert sparked outrage across Nigeria with many
individuals and groups condemning the governor’s action.
Even the Peoples’ Democratic Party, PDP, Presidential Campaign
Organisation distanced itself from the governor stating that the advert
did not represent the campaign or Mr. Jonathan’s position.
On Thursday, Adamu Mu’azu, PDP’s National Chairman, attributed the
party’s dismal performance at the polls partly to the hate campaigns by
its members.
The newspapers which published the advert also came under intense
criticism from Nigerians who questioned their judgment and
professionalism.
But speaking during this year’s World Press Freedom Day in Lagos,
Femi Adesina, The Sun’s Editor-in-Chief, attributed the publication of
the morbid advert to the influence of media owners.
An ‘outrageous’ advert
It was the first attempt by any of the newspapers that ran the advert
four months ago to provide a justification for their action.
“The Sun and The Punch that ran the infamous Ayo Fayose hate advert,
what motivated the newspapers?” said Mr. Adesina, who was recently
re-elected President of the Nigerian Guild of Editors. “Was it just mere
pecuniary gains? I cannot speak for The Punch, but I know why The Sun
ran it. Money was secondary consideration. It was a decision I took
consciously as Managing Director and Editor in Chief.”
The advert, which had the pictures of Murtala Muhammed, Sani Abacha,
and Umaru Yar’Adua – past Nigerian presidents who died in office – was
accompanied by excerpts from the Bible book of Deuteronomy 30 verse 19.
“Nigerians be warned! Nigeria…I have set before thee Life and death.
Therefore, choose life that both thee and thy seed may live,” it said,
suggesting that Mr. Buhari represents death while his rival, President
Goodluck Jonathan represents life.
The advert went ahead to put a huge question mark over the picture of
Mr. Buhari, which was placed beside the pictures of the late leaders.
The advert asked its readers: “Will you allow history to repeat itself? Enough of State burials.”
It then attempted to spur ethnic controversy by saying, “Northern presidency should wait till 2019.”
At the time, Mr. Fayose had defended his decision to place the advert, saying it was all about politics.
“The governor is a Nigerian,” his spokesperson, Lere Olyainka, told
PREMIUM TIMES. “He has expressed his opinion. Other people are also free
to express theirs
“It is politics. You market your own product and you also try to pull
the opposing product down. That is how it is done. It is politics. Let
everybody play his own game. What I don’t support in politics is
violence.”
The defence
Mr. Fayose’s excuse did little to assuage public anger, with
political analysts describing the advert as one of the lowest moments in
the run-up to the 2015 general election.
Mr. Adesina defended his organisation, stating that what the public
saw on the newspapers’ covers on January 19 was a “heavily watered down”
version of the advert.
“That hate advert, two newspapers published it, The Sun and The
Punch,” Mr. Adesina began, speaking on the topic ‘Influence of Media
Owners on Fair and Balanced Reporting and Commentaries in 2015
Election.’
“Now you can ask me: why did we publish? That advert came on a
Sunday, January 18th, and we published it on January 19th. The advert
that was eventually published had been watered down considerably. I came
back from church, I opened my system and when I saw it I screamed.
“It had been sent to me from the office to clear for publication.
When I saw it I screamed. I then called Bolaji Tunji, our Executive
Director, Special Services, ‘Can we publish this and Nigeria will not
burn?’ Then we began to discuss and we began to tone it down. We removed
so many things from that advert. And what eventually appeared on
January 19th was the toned-down version.
“So if we had published the original…. So it was the toned-down
version that I approved that they eventually sent to The Punch that
appeared the next day.”
Mr. Adesina said that he is widely regarded as an “APC man” although
he does not belong to the party, and that rejecting the advert would
have meant trouble from Orji Uzor Kalu, the newspaper’s proprietor and a
founding member of the PDP.
“Now but if you ask me, why did I approve that advert?” he said. “I
knew that the toned-down version was still bad enough. But don’t forget
the ownership of my newspaper. A PDP chieftain owns the newspaper.
“If I had rejected that advert, they would have told my publisher
that this APC man has denied your paper revenue. He has rejected this
advert because he doesn’t like Jonathan.
“So, after we watered it down, we decided to take it. Punch also took
it. But we know the uproar that still came after it. But I tell you, if
you see the original of that advert, you would still then have to
commend the media.
“So ownership will always matter where press freedom is concerned.
There is no freedom without boundaries and the owners will always
constitute the boundary.”
‘Hateful campaigns’
According to the Electoral Act 2010, Section 95 (1), ‘A political
campaign or slogan shall not be tainted with abusive language directly
or indirectly likely to injure religious, ethnic, tribal or sectional
feelings.’
Section 95 (2) states that ‘Abusive, intemperate, slanderous or base
language or insinuations or innuendoes designed or likely to provoke
violent reaction or emotions shall not be employed or used in political
campaigns.’
In her presentation, Abigail Ogwezzy-Idisika of the University of
Lagos stated that the 2015 presidential campaigns were much about hate
speeches and devoid of concrete agenda beyond the promises of water,
roads, free education and security.
“On ethical grounds, it is the responsibility of media organisations
to reject any material intended for publication or airing by parties,
candidates and other interests that contains hateful or inciting words
and messages; refrain from publishing or airing abusive editorial
comments or opinions that denigrate individuals or groups,” said Mrs.
Ogwezzy-Idisika, the Head of Mass Communication Department at the
university.
“Journalists being the holders of public trust, parties and their
supporters should be ethical, discreet and more edifying. Parties and
candidates should be tolerant of opposing political views as guaranteed
by the constitution and be issue-based in their political campaigns.”
Source: Preminm Times
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