By Farooq Kperogi, Ph.D. Twitter: @farooqkperogi I had chosen to let this issue slide because it’s frankly of no consequence, in my o...
By Farooq Kperogi, Ph.D.
Twitter: @farooqkperogi
I had chosen to let this issue slide because it’s frankly of
no consequence, in my opinion, but I’ve been deluged with a relentless stream
of inquiries from readers asking why my “Notes from Atlanta” column has been
discontinued in the Daily Trust on Saturday. Since it’s practically impossible
to respond to all the email and social media inquires, I’ve decided to put up
this update.
Every rational, perceptive observer knows that the Buhari presidency
is in a desperate, panic mode now. They are arresting and jailing critics, freezing
bank accounts of opponents, bribing journalists silly to buy favorable coverage,
threatening media houses, and working to pull down the entire nation because
they know their game is up. That’s the general context for the discontinuation
of my column in the Daily Trust. As people who have followed my Saturday column
know, I am an inconvenient thorn in the flesh of the Buhari regime. I expose
their lies, hypocrisy, clannishness, and incompetence with a regularity that
unnerves them.
Predictably, the Buhari presidency had worked to take down
my column since at least 2016. Media Trust’s chairman, Malam Kabiru Yusuf, told
me, as early as mid-2016, that he had been under tremendous pressure because of
my column and wondered what kind of pressure I had been under myself. But he
said I shouldn’t be intimidated. He called me the “conscience of the nation,”
which I found rather flattering. When he visited the US in, I think, 2017, he
called me and we spoke at length. Again, he told me he had my back and
appreciated the diversity I brought to the opinion menu in the Daily Trust.
Malam Kabiru hired me as a reporter in the then Weekly Trust
in 1998 on the recommendation of his childhood friend, Professor Attahiru Jega.
He is someone I’ve come to reserve the greatest respect for. He is an
uncommonly urbane, suave, cosmopolitan, and tolerant person. He fits the
classic definition of a liberal—broadminded, progressive, intellectually
sophisticated, charitable, and open-minded. So I wasn’t surprised when he encouraged
me to continue with my critical commentaries on the Buhari regime in spite of
the pressures the commentaries were bringing on him and on Media Trust, Daily
Trust’s parent company.
But Kabiru isn’t the sole owner of Media Trust; he is only
the majority shareholder and chairman of the company. Most importantly, though,
the company has to survive, and government advertising is the lifeblood of the
news media in Nigeria. Government can shut down a news media organization by
asking all its agencies to withhold advertising patronage from it. I sensed
that the Buhari regime had threatened Daily Trust with advertising patronage
withdrawal when the Editor-in-Chief and MD of the paper, since 2017,
uncharacteristically started to send out periodic memos to columnists to
importune them to tone down their language. I’ve written my column for more
than 13 years and have always had a vigorous style. At no other time had the
E-I-C ever written a memo to columnists to tell them how to write. The E-I-C/MD
was frank enough to admit to me that I was the target of the memos. But I was
infinitely harsher on Jonathan and Obasanjo than I’ve been on Buhari, but
neither I nor any columnist was ever told how to write and what not to write
during the Jonathan and Obasanjo administrations.
Then at least once, the editor of the Saturday paper pleaded
with me—nicely, I should add—to take out a sentence or two in a column in order
to avoid “libel.” He obviously knows nothing about libel, which I not only
formally studied at undergraduate and graduate levels in Nigeria and the US, but
also teach and research for a living. (It’s not his fault since he didn’t study
journalism). Finally, he once refused to publish one of my columns where I
questioned the genuineness of Buhari’s WASC. In media law, a statement of
opinion can’t be libelous; only statements of facts can be. In any case, I had
had occasions in the past to question the genuineness of Goodluck Jonathan’s
PhD, and the editor didn’t have any issue with that. (I wrote another column
after I discovered that Jonathan’s PhD was genuine based on my private
investigation.)
So when Daily Trust’s E-I-C and MD called me on December 13
to say that the “board” had met and decided that my Saturday column should be
discontinued because of my critical articles on Buhari (yes, he was that frank),
I wasn’t surprised. I saw it coming. He was courteous, respectful, and honest
about it, which is admirable. I had been expecting it, given how increasingly
desperate and intolerant the Buhari regime has become lately. The regime is
using their power of advertising patronage to whip independent media houses
into line. Daily Trust can't afford to lose its bottom line because of one
column. I understand and support that. On my part, I can't afford to self-censor
because of a company's bottom line. So the "divorce" serves both of
us well.
I asked the E-I-C/MD two questions before we hung up. I
asked if I had ever written anything on Buhari that was factually inaccurate.
He said “no.” Then I asked if I had ever written anything on Buhari that was
libelous and he said “no.” That was good enough for me. In any case, the column
now appears on the back page of the Nigerian Tribune on Saturday. It’s also
published on my blog. So it’s pointless censorship.
People have asked if my grammar column will continue in the
Sunday edition of Daily Trust. No, it won’t. The energy I put into the grammar
column has been taking a toll on my research and my family. This is a good
opportunity to stop it and get some relief. I might resume it with another
paper in the future.
It was difficult especially on us readers. Your columns were very informative, educative and lively. I enjoyed every piece you wrote. And since you left I stopped buying any daily trust papers.
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