Daily Trust

I got my informatio­n on B/Haram from traders — Mailafia

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He was a guest on the programme, which was examining the banditry attacks in Southern Kaduna in Kaduna State, North-West zone of the country that has left scores dead.

Following the allegation, the Department of State Security (DSS) in Plateau State on Wednesday grilled Mailafia for seven hours after which he was allowed to go home. Also the Chairman of the Northern Governors Forum, Plateau State Governor Simon Lalong, called for investigat­ion into the matter. He maintained that the allegation was too weighty to be swept under the carpet.

The former deputy governor of the CBN said he spoke due to his concern for the North and country in general, but maintained that he did not know that the video would go viral.

In the interview he granted to the BBC Hausa service and monitored by Daily Trust, Mailafia said he had agreed to an online radio interview with people who were unknown to him from Lagos, but did not know that they were recording it.

“I thought it was for a local FM radio in Lagos,” he said.

He said even though he did not intend for his comments to go viral, he cannot deny making them, adding that he was a fan of President Muhammadu Buhari and was passionate about northern Nigeria and the people who have suffered the consequenc­es of the killings.

Speaking on what transpired between him and the DSS when he was invited to their office in Jos, the former CBN deputy governor said, “when they invited me they told me they had seen a video clip in which I said I was against the killings of innocent people and that I met with some people who told me that when they are done with the villages, they will move to the cities and go after big personalit­ies in their homes and lead to war in the country. That was what I heard and I repeated it.”

He said during the interrogat­ion, the security agents accorded him with the utmost respect.

“They did their job as they should and I cooperated with them. I gave them the necessary informatio­n at my disposal and I cannot lie about what I do not know, so I told them to pardon me because I cannot say what I don’t know. It was not my intention for my words to go viral but since it has gone viral, I cannot say I did not make that comment,” he said.

When asked to speak further on the allegation of a northern governor being a commander of Boko Haram, he said he had already spoken to the DSSS and would not want to create tension.

“What I can tell you is that I am a fan of President Muhammadu Buhari and the president is doing his utmost best but there are some wicked people around him who do not give him the right advice. I am not a troublesom­e person, my name is Mailafia (peace lover), I said what I said because of my sympathy for the people, my love for northern Nigeria. They are those who have been accusing me of not being a northern patriot but the killings are more in northern Nigeria.”

NBC slams N5m fine on radio station

Meanwhile, knocks have continued to trail the imposition of N5 million fine on the Nigerian Info FM station by the National Broadcasti­ng Commission (NBC) over the comment of Mailafia, it aired.

In its statement on Thursday signed by its management and titled: ‘The National Broadcasti­ng Commission Fines Nigeria Info 99.3 for Unprofessi­onal Broadcast’, the NBC said it noted with “grave concern, the unprofessi­onal conduct” of the station, which it said provided its platform for Mailafia to “promote unverifiab­le and inciting views that could encourage or incite crime and lead to public disorder.”

The statement continued: “Mailafia’s comments on the “Southern Kaduna Crisis”, were devoid of facts and by broadcasti­ng same to the public, Nigeria Info 99.3FM, is in violation of the following sections of the Nigeria Broadcasti­ng Code:

“3.1.1. No broadcast shall encourage or incite to crime, lead to public disorder or hate, be repugnant to public feelings or contain offensive reference to any person or organizati­on, alive or dead or generally be disrespect­ful to human dignity;

“3.1.2. Broadcasti­ng shall promote human dignity, therefore, hate speech is prohibited;

“Consequent on these provisions and in line with the amendment of the 6th edition of the Nigeria Broadcasti­ng Code, Nigeria Info 99.3FM Lagos, has been fined the sum of N5,000,000.00 (Five Million

Naira), only.

“This is expected to serve as a deterrent to all other broadcast stations in Nigeria who are quick to provide a platform for subversive rhetoric and the exposition­s of spurious and unverifiab­le claims, to desist from such.

“The Commission wishes to put it on record that it will not hesitate to suspend the Broadcast Licence of broadcast stations that continue to breach the Code.

“Stations are, by this statement, admonished to desist forthwith, from airing unwholesom­e content, or be ready to face appropriat­e sanctions.”

Fine an attempt to gag free speech- CSJ, lawyer

Meanwhile, the Executive Director of the Centre for Social Justice (CSJ), Eze Onyekpere, said what is happening is an attempt to gag freedom of speech, and expression as enshrined in the Nigerian Constituti­on.

“It is an infringeme­nt on the right to hold an opinion because it is clearly wrong to impose a fine for an offence which is unknown to the constituti­on. If the radio programme was live, it means that whatever was said was said on the spur of the moment, which means that there was no opportunit­y for the radio station to vet it. In that case it is the person who said it that should be fined. And we are not aware that he has been charged for any offence,” Onyekpere said.

Also reacting, Ali Zubairu Esq condemned the fine imposed on the radio station, saying it was unconstitu­tional and an action likely to fold up the station.

“We need to examine whether hate speech is actually defined as an offence under the law and what constitute­s hate speech,” he said.

He said

since

Mailafia did not incite violence, his comments may be viewed as advice or opinion which has to be investigat­ed. He added that harassing him would discourage others who may want to give advice or opinion on national issues.

“The minister of informatio­n cannot be the law giver, interprete­r and executor. For somebody expressing himself, the radio station cannot be fined since Mailafia did not recant his statement that he met some Boko Haram ex-commanders, although he admitted that some of the claims were not verified. It means he still stands by those statements,” he said.

“What he said is why the Northern governors are saying ‘investigat­e this further’. Where is the hate speech there? So, these are some of the questions begging for answers.”

times for

Difficult stations

radio

The N5 million was recently announced by the Minister of Informatio­n and Culture, Lai Mohammed as the new fine for hate speech from N500, 000 in the NBC Code.

The minister said the fine was to deter people who seek to destabilis­e the country.

Nigeria Info may become the first organizati­on to be penalized under the amended NBC Code.

An industry operator, who pleaded anonymity, explained that the COVID-19 pandemic has dealt a huge blow to the entire media industry in Nigeria with most radio stations struggling to stay afloat.

He said advertoria­ls now come in trickles at the rate of between N5, 000 and N10, 000 per minute inclusive of VAT, explaining that the revenue go into the running of the stations- generating sets, internet services, stationeri­es, transporta­tion, news subscripti­ons, staff pay, and other overhead costs.

 ?? Photo: Benedict Uwalaka ?? Residents of Morning Star street and its environs protest over plans to turn a football pitch into a cemetery at Ejigbo in Lagos
yesterday
Photo: Benedict Uwalaka Residents of Morning Star street and its environs protest over plans to turn a football pitch into a cemetery at Ejigbo in Lagos yesterday
 ??  ?? Obadiah Mailafia
Obadiah Mailafia

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