Editorial
IGP, The Media And Inciting Comments
Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Alhaji
Abubakar Mohammed warned recently
that the police would no longer condone inciting comments that tend to compromise the peace and unity of Nigeria. He said there are laws against such recklessness.
This warning may not be un-connected with the attempt by a sitting Governor in the northern part of Nigeria to incite that section of the country against the Federal Government. Indeed, even a section of the news media had not helped matters in this direction.
We agree that these are no easy times for the police and the security community as a whole, but if they had diligently put to work the laws of the land over the years, some of the extreme tendencies of the day could have been averted.
For some time now, some persons in Nigeria have wondered if there are laws controlling the dissemination of information. They had wondered if there was anything that the people should not be protected from and whether the resilience of the Nigerian is limitless.
This is why we are not amused by the comments of the IGP. Like some persons, we are at a loss why the police would say that they would no longer condone lawless comments now. Why have they condoned it all these years? Why are they still warning instead of using some people as examples?
It is public knowledge that apart from the laws regulating the activities of the news media, the law that sanctions some kinds of communication exist. But the permissive environment had given the impression that anyone can say anything, abuse anyone and provoke the sensibilities of any group.
Interestingly, some of those ill-bred characters claim freedom of speech as their defence. Yet, no freedom is absolute. Similarly, to every freedom there is responsibility. The way some Nigerians are going, some people may cause public disorder that would be too late to quell.
Another laughable defence is that “we are in a democracy and we have a right to say our minds.” Again, that is only one hand of the right granted by the system. What is the duty thereto? May be we should also note that the definition of democracy does not include the liberty of all men to do as they please. There can be no worse anarchy!
That is why the government, especially the security agencies should wake up and not allow Nigeria to slide slowly back into the state of nature, where everyone is law unto himself or can cause social crisis for the majority of law abiding citizens.
Even as we want to see immediate action in this direction, we cannot lose sight of the fears of a section of the populace of the possible abuse of the process by the police. Some even believe that apart from the possibility of using it to witch-hunt political opponents, it would be used to muscle free speech and remove the flavour from democracy. While we can only leave this on the conscience of the authorities and the vibrancy of the Nigerian to go to court to restore his rights, we think that there has been too much reckless, inciting and condemnable comments in Nigeria; sadly, most of them are capable of inciting and legitimising lawlessness.
It is true that the internet had given the right of way in the public information highway to all, including the insane, the uninformed and the outright satanic, but the news media cannot do the same. In fact, to copy and publish verbatim from the social media questions the professional competence of those in the news media.
In building the Nigeria of our dreams, the age-tested values of respect, morality and sound spiritual virtues must guide our public discourse. The resort to caution is not cowardice but maturity. In fact, in many cases silence is golden. It is high time people reasoned their words and used them only to build.
For the few loose-canons, even in the political class, we must be bold to condemn their mis-adventure and educate them on how the nobles in any society should speak. It is no mark of civilisation or power to splash invectives, venoms and green coloured vomits whenever one gets the opportunity to communicate. It is even worse when it is laced with threats and inciting comments.
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