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 Southeast Activists Angry, Seek IGP Ibrahim Idris’ Sack

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…See their reasons

A coalition of human rights activists and organisations based in South East Nigeria have demanded the immediate sack of the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Ibrahim Idris for breaching his oaths of office and allegiance by illegally detaining a journalist, Tim Elombah.

The activists also accused the IGP of allowing his personal interest and bias to override his public duties and powers; and brazenly breaching and making mockery of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999, as amended.

In atatement issued on Thursday in Onitsha by the Southeast based Coalition of Human Rights and Good Governance Organizations (SBCHROs), signed by Emeka Umeagbalasi; Comrade Aloysius Emeka Attah; Barr. Chinwe Umeche; Comrade Nelson Nnana Nwafor; Jerry Chidozie Chukwuokoro, PhD; and Mazi Tochukwu Ezeoke, the group pointed out that “It is now 17 days after the ancestral home of the Elombah Family in Otolo, Nnewi, Anambra State was cordoned off and surrendered by over fifteen operatives of the Special Anti Robbery Squad (SARS) in the early morning or between 5am and 5.30am on the New Year Day of 1st January 2018; a nationally proclaimed public holiday or a day of the blue law when government offices and other public establishments are closed for businesses or official activities.”

It narrated: “During the invasion, the entire Elombah family including their wives, children and the aging mother were held hostage, threatened and traumatized. The entire family house and all its rooms were also ransacked and thoroughly searched without warrant; after which valuable items including smart phones and laptops were made away with till date.

“The invasion of the family of the Elombahs on a national holiday was single handedly ordered and officially sealed by the Inspector General of Police, Alhaji Ibrahim Kpotum Idris; using the Federal SARS; a Police department established for the sole purpose of combating violent crimes of armed robbery and kidnapping. In the course of the ungodly and unconstitutional invasion, all adult male members of the Elombah Family; numbering six, were abducted; after which three were freed at the Awkuzu State SARS headquarters, Anambra State and three others, namely Daniel (UK based lawyer), Timothy (Editor of Elombah online news) and Izuchukwu (a businessman trading in Niger State) were taken to the Federal SARS Headquarters at Abuja where Citizens Daniel and Izuchukwu Elombah were granted bail the next day; leaving Timothy detained without trial till date.

“The criminal offence, written and known to Nigeria’s 1999 Constitution and criminal laws; warranting such violent invasion and use of excessive force was never disclosed to the family at the point of the invasion or at the Awkuzu SARS headquarters where the abductees were briefly taken to before being moved to Abuja. The non-disclosure of the offence to the arrested or their family members or lawyers continued after more than two days.

“The abductors later came up with allegation of offence of ‘criminal defamation against the person of IGP’; claiming that the Elombahs via Timothy wrote and published an online article against the IGP titled: ‘IGP Ibrahim Idris’s Unending Baggage of Controversies’. The article, according to the abductees had nothing to do with them or their news site. It was published in a number of news sites on 22nd December 2017 by one Ebiowei Dickson; who neither works for the Elombahs nor publishes on their news site. The link to the said article is: https://politicsngr.com/2017/12/22/igp-ibrahim-idriss-unending-baggage-controversies/

“As if this was not enough, the IGP, in a clear case of prosecutorial vindictiveness, refused to free and discharge the Elombahs with an apology and compensation; but went and secured, questionably, a seven days investigative remand order from Mpape Area Court in Abuja to further detain Citizen Tim Elombah. The seven days investigative remand order, secured on 2nd Jan 2018 has expired without renewal since 9th January 2018; yet Citizen Tim Elombah has been detained for nine more days without bail or trial; over an alleged misdemeanour offence carrying a maximum of three years imprisonment on conviction.”

It expressed concern that at the expiration of the seven days investigative remand order on 9th January 2018, the family of Tim Elombah and his lawyers went to secure his release or observe his arraignment and trial in court, “but were told by the authorities of Federal SARS, under the instruction of IGP that ‘he cannot be released but will remain with us until we tidy up his file to arraign and charge him for Cyber Stalking before an Abuja Federal High Court’.

“When reminded by his lawyers of the expiration of the court remand order since 9th January and non-renewal of same or arraignment of their captive, the Federal SARS authorities told them to remember that ‘this is IG’s personal matter under whose order and instructions your brother is with us here until otherwise instructed or directed’.

“As leaders of the Southeast Based Coalition of Human Rights and Good Governance Organizations,  SBCHROs; among us are lawyers, criminologists, philosophers, political scientists and journalists, etc; the ordeal of the Elombahs in the hands of IGP and his anti armed robbery operatives and officers is a clear case of not only abuse of power and office; prohibited by Section 15 (5) of Nigeria’s 1999 Constitution, but also a total recourse to infamous Decrees 2 and 4 of 1984; which allowed the like of IGP to arrest and detain at will and outside the law or without trial; of any citizen even without any credible suspicion of commission of any offence.

“Under the said Decrees, citizens were abducted, detained and tortured recklessly on guesswork or suspicion of simple offences as light as affray and common assault or identity or tribal hatred called racial profiling. Under the present central Government since June 2015, innocent and hated citizens are arrested even in their sleep and thrown into long detention before the commencement of any form of investigation.

“Cases of investigative guesswork, transfer of criminal responsibility and mistaken identity as well as indiscriminate arrest and treatment of citizens as violent criminals in criminal allegations strictly bordering on misdemeanours and simple offences or non-capital offences are also very rampant under the present Buhari administration.

“As publicly known, criminal offences in Nigeria are clearly defined and categorized by punishments or sentencing. The Nigeria’s 1999 Constitution in its Section 35 also clearly differentiates between capital offences and non-capital offences and processes and duration of their investigations. The Criminal Code Act further divides them into felony (capital and non-capital), misdemeanours and simple offences; providing for maximum of death/life imprisonment for capital felony and four years and below life imprisonment for non-capital felony; and maximum of three years for misdemeanour and maximum of six months for simple offences.

“The ACJ Act of 2015 was enacted to ensure strict adherence to Section 35 (4) of the Constitution by ensuring that any person accused of committing capital offence and taken into custody for investigation is not detained ad infinitum or perpetually without trial or court bail. The Act strongly recommends for the use of court remand, cumulatively not exceeding 60 days in the case of a person detained without trial or administrative bail or 90 days if detained but granted temporary freedom and not yet charged to court.

“That is to say that certain categories of criminal offence especially under non-capital felony, misdemeanour and simple offences such as white-collar crimes or offences of corruption and cyber crimes including so called ‘cyber stalking’ and criminal defamation; do not require ‘investigative court remand’, not to talk of detention outside the law or without trial or that done via criminal processes of   extra jus (beyond the law), extra legal (beyond what the written criminal law provides) and extra judicial (beyond court or judicial pronouncement or verdict).”

SBCHROs emphasized: “For the avoidance of doubt, the so called federal offence of cyber stalking, legislatively enacted and presidentially assented in late May 2015 is clearly a non-capital offence, which falls under the category of misdemeanour; requiring 24hrs detention or no detention before investigation. The offence, too, does not require detention without trial or investigative detention with court remand.

“For an offence of criminal defamation or cyber stalking to be alleged against any citizen, the alleging/investigative authorities must have established some credible elements of linking evidence or the criminal act done. It requires more of actus reus (criminal act) and some elements of mens rea (guilty mind). That is to say that there are no rooms for guesswork, mistaken identity or transfer of criminal responsibility in offences of cyber stalking or criminal defamation.”

It further observed that Nigeria’s cybercrime law is being used to muzzle the press and press freedom, “which is inconsistent with Sections 22 and 39 of Nigeria’s 1999 Constitution.  Otherwise called Cyber Stalking Act of 2015, the authorities in Nigeria have used the accusation of cyber stalking to harass and press charges against several bloggers and other media practitioners who criticized serving and retired public office holders through online and social media. The Cyber Stalking is widely seen as the modified version of Decree 4 or anti press freedom decree of 1984.

“Under Section 24 of the so called Cyber Stalking Act, punishment on conviction carries a fine of up to N7 million ($22,000) and a maximum three-year jail term for ‘anyone convicted of knowingly sending an online message that he knows to be false, for the purpose of causing annoyance, inconvenience, danger, obstruction, insult, injury, criminal intimidation, enmity, hatred, ill will or needless anxiety to another’.

“By the provisions of the Act, it is strictly a misdemeanour and not a capital offence. It only requires a maximum of 24hrs investigative detention and has nothing whatsoever to do with several days or weeks of court remand or unconstitutional detention without trial.”

The rights group further demanded the immediate and unconditional release of Citizen Timothy Elombah as well as all items confiscated and seized or possessed from the family members on 1st Jan 2018 including laptops, smart phones and travelling documents and total end to indiscriminate arrest, torture, intimidation, harassment and detention without trial of all members of the journalism profession in Nigeria.

The group also insisted that for any journalist that truly breaks the criminal laws of the land, due processes and provisions of the 1999 Constitution must be followed at all times.

“The post administrative bail undertaking signed by the duo of Daniel and Izuchukwu Elombah at Federal SARS Headquarters making it mandatory for them to be reporting at Federal SARS at the beck and call of the investigating officers must be revoked and discontinued.

“We also demand a duly written and signed apology from the IGP to be published in major print, visual and online dailies. The IGP must also publicly apologize for visiting the Elombahs and their families especially their children with crude and disproportionate force of arms through his special anti robbery operatives as if they are repeat-offender armed robbers.”

The coalition partners are the Int’l Society for Civil Liberties and the Rule of Law, Civil Liberties Organization, Southeast Zone, Centre for Human Rights and Peace Advocacy, Human Rights Organization of Nigeria, Global Rights and Dev. Int’l, Society Advocacy Watch Project, Anambra Human Rights Forum, Southeast Good Governance Forum, and Int’l Solidarity for Peace Human Rights Initiative. Others are Igbo Ekunie Initiative, Anambra State Branch of the Civil Liberties Organization, Foundation for Environmental Rights, Advocacy and Development, Rural Engagement and Development Foundation, Society for Economic Rights and Social Justice, Initiative for Ideal Development and Emancipatory Leadership in Nigeria, Igbo National Council, Forum for Promotion of National Ethos and Values.

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NOA Tasks Media Practitioners to Probe Manifestos of Aspiring Political Office Holders

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Lanre Issa-Onilu, the director general of NOA
Lanre Issa-Onilu, the director general of National Orientation Agency (NOA)

The National Orientation Agency (NOA) has encouraged media practitioners to introduce probing of manifestoes of aspiring political office holders as part of their responsibilities to reshape the country from frivolous and unkept promises.

Lanre Issa-Onilu, the director general of the agency, gave the task while speaking a a panelist at the 9th annual conference of the Guild of Corporate Online Publishers (GOCOP), with the theme,’ Reconciling Campaign Promises with Governance Realities: Challenges and Prospect’, held in Lagos

He pointed out that some of the so-called manifestos are not originally from those who presented but the party they belong to, and they end up subscribing to such manifestos, stressing that as media practitioners this should be probed.

‘Some people proposed manifestos which are not theirs, but party manifestos. They end up subscribing to their party manifestos. As journalists, we do not question manifestos, but populated airtime for other things’

He equally pointed out that the manifesto of the federal government is the manifesto that governed Lagos state, explaining that the National Orientation Agency(NOA) is to communicate government projects.

The Director General added that government require value documentation, recalling that before he joined the agency, he was among those who said it should be scrapped, but when he got there, he discovered that the staff there are committed

‘Before I went to NOA. I was among those who said it should be scrapped. It is not the Agency’s problem but a Nigerian problem. When I got there, I discovered that the staff there are committed

‘I am an agency under a Ministry. There is the problem of the need to have them buy into what I want to do. I am lucky to get the support of the president who is interested in the unity of the country’, he stated.

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Enugu State Govt Condemns Murder of Catholic Priest, Places ₦10 Million Bounty on Killers

…Commiserates with family, Catholic Church

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Peter Ndubuisi Mbah

The Enugu State Government has strongly condemned the gruesome murder of Rev. Fr. Mathew Eya of Nsukka Catholic Diocese by unknown assailants.

The government also commiserated with the late priest’s immediate family, the Catholic Diocese of Nsukka, and indeed the Catholic faithful in general over the tragic incident, which occurred on Friday, September 19, 2025.

In a statement issued by the Commissioner for Information and Communication, Dr. Malachy Agbo, the government described the action as cowardly and cold-blooded.

Father Eya was said to have been shot dead by a group of assailants, who attacked and killed him along Alumona- Eha Ndiagu road in Nsukka Local Government Area of Enugu.

The government has, therefore, reiterated that security of lives and property remains its priority and vowed to bring the perpetrators to justice.

It added that it would not spare any resources within its reach, including technology and credible intelligence to track down the criminals and defeat the remnant agents of evil in the state.

Consequently, the Enugu State Government has placed a ₦10 million reward for anyone with credible information that could lead to the arrest of the perpetrators of the heinous crime.

Anybody with credible information about the perpetrators should quickly contact 07077451426. 

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IPI Raises Alarm over Rising Media Repression in Nigeria

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International Press Institute - IPI
L-R: President, International Press Institute (IPI) Nigeria, Musikilu Mojeed; Director General, Voice of Nigeria (VON), Jibrin Baba Ndace; immediate past Director, Digital Media, VON, Hajia Sani; retired News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) staff, Ameena Sani; Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity to President Muhammadu Buhari, Garba Shehu; and former President of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), Abdulwaheed Odusile, during a dinner organised on Saturday in Abuja by some members of IPI Nigeria in honour of Hajia Sani, who recently retired from VON.

The International Press Institute (IPI), a global body committed to protecting press freedom and the free flow of information, has raised concern over the recent cases of media repression in the country.

Mr Musikilu Mojeed, president, IPI Nigeria, raised the alarm at a dinner organised by the institute, to honour one of its members and a retired Director, Digital Media, Voice of Nigeria (VON) Hajia Hadiza Hussaina Sani in Abuja on Saturday.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the dinner was organised to honour the media icon for her dedication and service, after clocking mandatory retirement age of 60 years.

NAN also reports that the identical twin sister of the celebrator, Hajia Ameena Hassana Sani, equally retired meritoriously from the service of the agency (NAN) as a Director.

Speaking at the event, Mojeed, Editor-in-Chief, Premium Times, cited the recent “disturbing” instances of banning of live political programme in Kano State and the arrest of a journalist in Ekiti State.

“Akwa Ibom State Government recently evicted Channels TV crew, a journalist and a cameraman, from the press centre inside Government House, Uyo.

“The repressive action was taken, over the publication of a video clip, where the governor, eventually confirmed he is defecting from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to the All Progressives Congress (APC).

“A journalist with FIJ, Sodiq Atanda was recently arrested by the police in Ekiti State.

“A former “ThisDay” employee, Azuka Ogujiuba, was reportedly arrested and harassed by the Police for doing her job.

“Every single day you wake up, it is one form of harassment or the other against the media,” he said.

Mojeed, called for continued advocacy to protect press freedom and promote independent journalism.

He stressed that, efforts to protect journalists’ rights and promote independent journalism are crucial in Nigeria’s media landscape.

Mojeed said Sani’s retirement came at a critical time when the media sector in Nigeria is facing numerous challenges, including harassment, arrests, and censorship.

He noted Sani’s significant contributions to IPI Nigeria, including her role in organising its World Congress in Nigeria in 2018, as well as her subsequent active participation in various committees.

Mojeed appealed to the celebrator to continue advocating for press freedom and supporting the work of IPI Nigeria, emphasising that her expertise and experience are invaluable to the organisation.

The Director-General, VON, Mallam Jibrin Ndace, expressed gratitude to IPI Nigeria for recognising Sani’s contributions, stating that the gesture also reflected positively on the entire VON team.

He described Sani as a professional journalist who seamlessly transitioned from traditional journalism to modern digital practices, leading the digital department with innovation.

According to the DG, Sani’s leadership in the digital space, kept VON at the forefront of public media institutions and global competitiveness.

He commended her experience, passion, and love for journalism, which he said, enabled her to excel in her role and serve as a role model for younger journalists.

The VON DG emphasised that, “journalism is a marathon, not a sprint”, and Sani’s long-standing career is a testament to her dedication and commitment to the profession.

Mr Garba Shehu, s spokesman to late President Muhammadu Buhari, described the retirement of Sani as a significant loss for the organisation but a potential gain for other sectors of the journalism profession.

Shehu praised her, as “a strong and young professional with much to contribute to journalism”.

He highlighted her unique qualities, particularly her social responsibility, selflessness, and commitment to helping others to succeed.

According to him, Sani embodies the principles of servant leadership, a concept often touted by politicians but rarely exemplified.

“Her legacy as a role model for young journalists and a champion of socially responsible journalism will continue to inspire others in the field,” he said.

Abdulwaheed Odusile, former President of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), commended Sani’s dedication and expertise, which he said, have earned her recognition and respect in the industry..

On her part, Sani expressed gratitude to God and her family for their support throughout her 34 years career in public service.

While reflecting on the challenges and rewards of her time in service, she highlighted the importance of dedication, clear vision, and family support.

Sani emphasised the need for media professionals to adapt to new technologies and appreciate their impact on the industry and the society

She stressed that, telling a good story starts with understanding oneself and one’s audience.

Despite retiring from active public service, she assured to remain active in the media space, pursuing research, teaching, writing, and lecturing.

“It has been a very difficult, challenging, interesting and rewarding 34 years in service.

“It’s not easy. You have new and great ideas, but some people don’t understand, so they find it a bit difficult to agree with you.

“But if you are consistent, if you have a clear vision of what you want to achieve, and you are dedicated and resolute, the sky is not the limit.

“I have pulled out from active public service, but have not retired. My brain is still exceptionally active, and I plan to utilise it.

“I’ll be doing a lot of research work and writing, and I won’t get tired of seeing myself in the media space,” she said.

NAN reports that Sani’s dedication to her work and her commitment to excellence have been hallmarks of her career, which started with the Nigeria Television Authority (NTA) before joining VON.

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