A Nigerian rights group, Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) has condemned the decision of the nation’s presidency to ban some journalists and media outlets from covering activities at the presidential villa.
In a letter signed by its Deputy Director, Kolawole Oluwadare, SERAP argued that Tinubu’s “administration cannot with one broad stroke ban journalists from covering public functions. Citizens’ access to information and participation would mean little if journalists and media houses are denied access to the seat of government.”
SERAP urged President Bola Tinubu to use his “good offices and leadership position to immediately reverse the unlawful ban on 25 journalists and media houses from covering the presidential villa and restore the accreditations of those affected.”
The position follows a report that the presidency had withdrawn the accreditations of some 25 journalists from covering activities at Nigeria’s seat of power. The banned journalists include those from the Galaxy TV, Ben TV, MITV, ITV Abuja, PromptNews, ONTV, and Liberty TV.
The rights group wants the President “to publicly instruct the officials in the presidential villa to allow journalists and media houses to freely do their job and discharge their constitutional duty of holding those in power to account.
“The legal obligations imposed on your government to ensure and uphold media freedom and human rights, and facilitate public access to the presidential villa as a public trust outweigh any purported ‘security concerns and overcrowding of the press gallery area’”, it said.
It maintained that the foundational elements of a democratic and law-based society were access to information, freedom of the press, and citizen engagement in their own governance.
Nearly 40% of the countries in Africa, up from 33% last year, had challenging operating conditions for journalists, according to the RSF 2023 World Press Freedom Index released in May.