Mr. Lai Mohammed, Information Minister. |
The crisis rocking the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC)
appears far from being over, as the board, yesterday, declared the adoption of
the 2020 broadcasting code illegal.
It held that all
actions taken by the Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed and the
commission’s acting Director General, Prof. Armstrong Idachaba, to review and
adopt the sixth code for the regulation of the industry did not follow due
process, thus stand rejected.
Addressing the media yesterday in Abuja, board chairman, Ikra
Aliyu Bilbis, leading nine other members, claimed that the minister was fond of
dropping President Muhammadu Buhari’s name for the wrong reason.
He clarified that the
code “is a regulatory framework put together jointly by stakeholders to guide
their operations in the industry and is therefore not a unilateral government
instrument, as it is already back by law thus not requiring any further
presidential approval.”
Arguing that Mohammed
had not shown a copy of the presidential endorsement till date, Bilbis added
that the Nigerian leader “is a stickler for due process.”
He maintained that the minister’s version of the revised NB Code
“does not meet any known criterion of due process and inclusiveness of
stakeholders.”
The board denied
endorsing the new regulation contrary to the claims of the acting chief
executive of the organisation.The Idachaba-led management had subjected the
amendments to public scrutiny on March 26,2020 in Lagos amid insinuation that
the move had the backing of the board.
Bilbis went on:
“Nothing can be farther from the truth. The ‘public presentation’ was actually
attended by serving directors in the NBC, one former DG of the NBC, a member
representing the Ministry of Information and only four selected stakeholders.
When compared with the over 60 stakeholders that attended the 2019 presentation
in Kano, there is a wide gap in industry representation.”
He pointed out the day
of the ‘public presentation’ fell on a time the Federal Government had
announced a COVID-19 lockdown in Lagos, Ogun states and the Federal Capital
Territory (FCT), wondering why such an important ‘review document’ which
affects people’s investments and livelihoods could hold under that
‘abnormality’.
Disturbed by public
outcry, the chairman said the board initiated a process duly advertised for
stakeholders to right the lapses, but surprisingly, he alleged Idachaba sabotaged
the effort and disclaimed the notice.
“As a board, we have received and taken our time to compile the
responses of numerous stakeholders. Most of them have adduced reasonable
reasons against the proposed amendment,” he added.
Efforts to reach the
acting DG for comments were futile, as he neither picked his calls nor
responded to the messages sent to his mobile phone at press time.
However, the regulator
has imposed a N5 million fine on a Lagos station, Nigeria Info 99.3FM, for alleged
breach.
According to the
commission, the media house provided a platform for its guest and former Deputy
Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Dr. Obadiah Mailafia, to
“promote unverifiable and inciting views that could encourage or incite to
crime and lead to public disorder.”
Mailafia had on
Wednesday, during a live programme, alleged that a northern governor was
leading the Boko Haram sect.In a statement issued yesterday in Abuja by its
Deputy Director, Public Affairs, Ekanem Antia, NBC observed that Mailafia’s
comments on the Southern Kaduna crisis were devoid of facts.
Consequently, it said that the radio station erred to have
broadcast same to the public.The commission warned that it would not hesitate
to suspend the licence of any station that breaches the code with impunity.
Besides, the Coalition
of United Political Parties (CUPP), Media Rights Agenda (MRA) and the
International Press Centre have faulted the fine.
Reacting yesterday
through its spokesman, Ikenga Imo Ugochinyere, the group described the decision
as “the highest degree of oppression.”It said the penalty amounts to disregard
for human rights, adding that it was unfair to “beat a child and ask him not to
cry.”
In a statement issued
in Lagos and signed by its Programme Director, Mr. Ayode Longe, MRA submitted
that the regulator’s conduct was taking the country down a dangerous path.
IPC’s stance was communicated by its Director, Lanre Arogundade.
·
Source: https://guardian.ng/news/nbc-overrules-minister-on-broadcasting-code/
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