Skip to content
Friday 8 May 2026
  • Home
  • Advertise with us
  • Contact
The Frontier
Click to read
The Frontier
  • News
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Headlines
  • Education
  • Health
  • Business & Economy
  • Sports
  • More
    • International
    • Religion
    • Entertainment
    • Info Tech
    • Matilda Showbiz
      • Gists
      • Music
      • Gossips
      • Oga MAT
      • Romance
    • Arts & Culture
    • Environment
    • Opinion
    • Features
    • Epistles of Anthony Kila
    • EyeCare with Dr Priscilia Imade
The Frontier
  • News
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Religion
  • Headlines
  • Education
  • International
  • Business & Economy
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Arts & Culture
  • Environment
  • Health
  • Matilda Showbiz
    • Gists
    • Music
    • Gossips
    • Oga MAT
    • Romance
  • Opinion
  • Epistles of Anthony Kila
  • EyeCare with Dr Priscilia Imade
  • Info Tech
  • Interview
The Frontier
Click to read
Headlines
Headlines

Abductions, detentions: Echoes of Abacha-era media clampdown resound under Tinubu

The FrontierThe FrontierMay 6, 2024 52716 Minutes read0

•Media clampdown

The wave of abduction of journalists that continues to grow under a so-called democratic government has no doubt become a point of concern for media practitioners who now have to worry about their safety as they discharge their duties.

The concerns are not only for reporters, editors and every media practitioner but also for their families and friends who fear for the safety and freedom of their loved ones, reports The PUNCH.

Given the abduction of First News Editor, Segun Olatunji, from his residence in Lagos on March 15, 2024, by the military, to the recent ordeal of Daniel Ojukwu of the Foundation for Investigative Journalism, who was seized by the police on the streets of Lagos, media professionals find themselves in a dire situation reminiscent of Nigeria’s junta era.

This is even as the Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris, said no journalist had been incarcerated under the President Bola Tinubu administration.

According to a statement on Friday, the Minister during a press briefing in Abuja, said, “I have not seen somebody in the life of this administration, for example, who has been put in jail, or who has gone into exile as a result of press freedom.”

Ojukwu went missing on Wednesday, May 1, 2024. His numbers were switched off, and his whereabouts were unknown to colleagues, family, and friends.

FIJ reporter detained

On Thursday, the FIJ made a missing person report at police stations in the area where Ojukwu was headed, However, on Friday, a private detective hired by FIJ tracked the last active location of the journalist’s phones to an address in Isheri Olofin, a location FIJ believed was where the police picked him up.

Ojukwu’s family later got wind of his detention at the State Criminal Investigation Department, Panti, where they were made to understand the authorities were accusing him of violating the 2015 Cybercrime Act.

His abduction came at a time when Nigerian journalists, last Thursday, joined their counterparts across the globe to mark the World Press Freedom Day.

FIJ noted that on the same day last year, World Press Freedom Day 2023, men of the Area F Police in Lagos arrested Ojukwu for telling them to stop punching a driver.

Ojukwu was given access to his phone yesterday following sustained media pressure. He told his employers he had been moved to Abuja from Lagos.

Yesterday, Ojukwu’s employers confirmed a chat with him after four days since he was picked up.

“I’m currently in Abuja; I am at the NPF-NCCC – that’s the Nigeria Police Force National Cybercrime Centre. I arrived this morning, and I was taken into a cell. All I know is that I’m in Abuja. This is the first time I’ve been given my phone since Wednesday. They (the NPF-NCCC agents) said that they were going to ask me questions. So, I’m waiting,” an FIJ report on Sunday quoted Ojukwu as saying.

It is unclear what the reporter’s offence is, but FIJ earlier said it was suspected to have been premised upon a report the embattled journalist did in November 2023.

According to the FIJ, when the Nigeria Police Force National Cybercrime Centre grilled the chairman of FIJ’s Board of Trustees, Bukky Shonibare, at their Abuja office in March, they had mentioned FIJ’s story on how Adejoke Orelope-Adefulire, the then Senior Special Assistant on Sustainable Development Goals to the president, paid N147.1m to an account traced to Enseno Global Ventures, an Abuja-based restaurant, for the construction of a classroom.

The Force Public Relations Officer, Olumuyiwa Adejobi, confirmed that Ojukwu was in Abuja with the police in an interview with our correspondent yesterday.

“Yes, that’s their (the NPF-NCCC) office. Where he (Ojukwu) was held before was not their office. If they are the ones handling the case, of course, they would take him to their centre,” he said when asked to confirm if the reporter was with the police in Abuja.

When asked about the details of the petition against the reporter, as we learnt, he said, “We will issue a statement on it. I’ve asked the cybercrime unit to brief me.”

When asked if the reporter would be charged to court, Adejobi said, “It depends. I don’t know. They are the ones investigating the case. From whatever they find, if he is to be charged to court, he will, but it depends on the nature of the offence. But I know there is a petition against him.”

Olatunji’s ordeal

Ojuwku’s ordeal is coming just barely two months after Olatunji of First News Editor was abducted. He was only released after about two weeks following sustained media pressure.

Shortly after his release, Olatunji vividly described his ordeal in the hands of the military at a press conference in Abuja organised by the International Press Institute, the Nigerian Guild of Editors, and the Nigeria Union of Journalists.

Narrating his experience, he said, “They handcuffed me and put me into the vehicle. At first, I thought they were taking me to the Directorate of Military Intelligence in Apapa, but then we made a detour to the Air Force Base and straight to the office of the National Air Defence Corps , where we waited for about three hours.

“I didn’t know we were waiting for a military aircraft to pick me up. After a while, when the aircraft came, someone came to me and asked me to hand over my glasses and then put a blindfold on me.”

On April 29, Olatunji alleged that the Defence Intelligence Agency had planned to tarnish his image and spread lies against him using an obscure online news website.

An online report published by Lagostoday.com, titled ‘Online Publisher Admits to False Story Against Gbajabiamila, Seeks Forgiveness,’ claimed that Olatunji had admitted to being contracted to write a false report against the Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila and that he had also apologised in writing over the report.

The report partly read, “In an unexpected turn of events, Olatunji confessed during an emergency press conference organised by prominent media unions that his detention by the DIA was linked to defamatory articles published against the Head of DIA and the Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila.

“One such article, titled ‘How Gbajabiamila Attempted to Corner $30bn, 66 Houses Special Investigator Traced to Sabiu,’ caught the attention of authorities and led to Olatunji’s detention.”

But Olatunji, while refuting this in a statement, described the report as tales by the moonlight.

“It’s all nothing but tales by the moonlight told to burnish their already battered image following their unfortunate involvement in a politically motivated matter in their desperate bid to please their civilian overlords. Anyone familiar with the DIA’s modus operandi knows it’s usually an admixture of subtle threat, naked threat, and outright force,” his statement partly read.

He said the DIA should be bold enough to tell Nigerians where such an “emergency press conference” occurred and when.

“They should also mention the various media organisations that covered their imaginary press conference,” he added.

He further narrated his ordeal during his detention, saying, “Gentlemen, I’m still struggling to recover from the trauma of my abduction and illegal detention in the DIA underground cell for those 14 hellish days.”

On February 22, a journalist with the Whistler Newspaper in Abuja, Kasarachi Aniagolu, was released from police custody after the female reporter was arrested the previous day by the anti-violence crime unit of the Nigerian Police Force while covering a raid on Bureau De Change operators in the Wuse Zone 4 area of Abuja.

She was arrested alongside 95 forex traders.

In a statement announcing her release, the newspaper said Aniagolu was detained for about eight hours.

“Thanks to the collective efforts of media outlets, human rights organisations, and concerned individuals who amplified the injustice of her arrest. Ms Aniagolu was released on Wednesday night after approximately eight hours of illegal detention at the Anti-Violence Crime Unit of the Nigerian Police Force in Guzape, Abuja,” the statement said.

Last December, the Media Foundation for West Africa condemned the arrest of a journalist, Achadu Idibia, of Daybreak Newspapers and called on the judicial authorities of Kaduna State to dismiss all charges against him.

On November 13, 2023, Idibia was arrested in Kaduna, questioned over a report he published and detained in a correctional facility. The journalist’s September 24, 2023 publication was titled “Kaduna Hajj camp, a national shame, men, women sleep together in overcrowded hall – investigation.”

The MFWA, therefore, called on the authorities to end the case, which violated the journalist’s rights, and to release him unconditionally.

Also, it was reported in December that the staff of Abuja Development Control and members of the Federal Capital Territory Task Force allegedly manhandled, beat, arrested, and detained Godwin Tsa, who is a journalist with Daily Sun while covering a peaceful protest by Abuja mechanics and spare parts dealers.

According to the newspaper, Tsa, who conspicuously displayed his staff identity card on his neck, had pleaded with his attackers that he was not part of the protesters but only carrying out his legitimate work. But his plea fell on deaf ears as he was arrested and hauled in a Police Hilux pick-up truck alongside some of the protesters and taken to the Utako police station, where he was eventually locked up in a cell with criminals.

For about four hours during his stay at the police station, he could not reach his office, family members, or anyone as his seized phone had not been released to him.

When his damaged phone was eventually returned to him, he was forced to delete all the pictures and videos of the protest.

Last December also, TVC confirmed that a blogger and multimedia content creator, Precious Eze, who was taken from his home in the Gbagada area of Lagos by unknown persons, was actually arrested by security agencies in the early hours of Tuesday, December 12, 2023.

An eyewitness told TVC News that the men who took him had identified themselves as security operatives but did not disclose the reason for his arrest.

There was no communication from Eze but it was suggested that he was held at a facility in Lagos.

In late January 2024, Justice Emeka Nwite of the Federal High Court, Abuja, granted bail to a Bayelsa-based news blogger and owner of Naija Live TV, Saint Onitsha.

On November 2, 2023, a Federal High Court in Abuja ordered Onitsha’s remand at the Kuje Custodial Centre over alleged defamation and cyberstalking against the Interim Administrator of the Presidential Amnesty Programme, Major General Barry Ndiomu (retd).

Daily Post reported that Onitsha faced charges in the Federal High Court, Abuja, for alleged cyberstalking in suit numbered FJC/ABJ/CR/492/2023 between the Inspector-General of Police as the complainant and Mienapamo Onitsha Saint as the defendant. He was later remanded in Kuje Correctional Centre following his arraignment.

In October, the Committee to Protect Journalists issued a statement urging authorities in Nigeria to immediately and unconditionally release Onitsha, swiftly drop all charges against him, and stop criminalising the press.

The Coalition for Whistleblowers Protection and Press Freedom in February condemned the arrest and detention of two journalists by the Kwara State Police Command.

On February 7, the editor-in-chief and managing editor of Informant247, an online media outfit, Salihu Ayatullahi and Adisa-Jaji Azeez, respectively, were reportedly charged in a Magistrate’s Court over reports published on November 10, 2023, and February 1, 2024, regarding an alleged corruption in Kwara State Polytechnic.

The journalists were charged with conspiracy under section 27(1)(b), cyberstalking under section 24(1)(b) of Nigeria’s Cybercrimes Act, and defamation under section 393 of the penal code.

The CWPPF condemned incessant harassment of the newsroom and urged the police to drop all charges against the two journalists.

In October 2023, CPJ urged authorities in Nigeria to drop charges against publishers of the independent news websites, Just Event Online and The Satcom Media, Babatunde AbdulRazaq and Oluwatoyin Bolakale.

According to the organisation, which tracks attacks on journalists, on September 11, police officers detained AbdulRazaq and Bolakale over their critical reporting about a local politician.

According to the charge sheet reviewed by CPJ, the September 9 articles contained allegations of abuse of office by Jumoke Gafar, a former principal private secretary to the Kwara State Governor, AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq.

According to the two journalists, their lawyer, and the charge sheet, on September 13, the two journalists were charged with cyberstalking—punishable by up to three years in jail and a N7m fine—and conspiracy—which carries a penalty of up to seven years in jail—under the Cybercrimes Act.

In February 2024, CPJ again urged Nigerian authorities to immediately drop all charges against journalists Adisa-Jaji Azeez, Salihu Ayatullahi, Salihu Taofeek, and Abdulrahman Damilola and allow them to work without fear of arrest.

Echoes of military

The recent ordeals of journalists echo the era of military rule, particularly the dark days of the Abacha regime when media practitioners battled intimidation, arrests, abduction, detention and even deaths in the course of their duty to promote democracy and accountability.

This was prevalent during the regime of General Sani Abacha, who ruled as the military Head of State after seizing power in 1993 until his death in 1998.

During this era, the Abacha regime proved to be a formidable adversary, establishing alarming precedents in its mistreatment of the press. Its tactics included arbitrary detentions, secret military trials, police brutality, enforced disappearances, bombings of media offices, and censorship through bans and seizures of publications.

The reverberations of the regime’s assault on independent journalism were felt across the West African sub-region, leading to an unprecedented decline in press freedom.

In a chilling incident in February 1997, Nigerian security forces abducted a publisher of Razor magazine, Moshood Fayemiwo, in broad daylight from neighbouring Benin. Fayemiwo endured months of torture and solitary confinement, chained to a pipe, until his eventual release in September. This brazen act underscored the impunity with which security agents operated under the Abacha regime.

A Treason and Treasonable Offenses Decree No. 29 of 1993 was used in 1995 by a special military tribunal to convict journalists Kunle Ajibade, Chris Anyanwu, George M’bah, and Ben Charles-Obi for critical reports that did not go down well with the military. The four journalists, who were later released by another government, would have served 15-year prison terms if Abacha were still in power.

In a narrative originally published in TheNEWS shortly after his release from the three-year incarceration and culled on Sunday from https://www.refworld.org, Ajibade recounted his experiences in an interview with the then Assistant Editor of TheNEWS, Adegbenro Adebanjo.

“I was taken to Makurdi on October 18, 1995. I was not allowed the use of a mosquito net, and that place is mosquito-infested because it is a stone’s throw from the Senie River. They only allowed the net in September 1997. I received chloroquine injections at the end of every month. To this day, I don’t really know what effect the monthly dose will have on my health.

“The meals we received were very poor. We were fed gabsar (corn meal). In the morning, it was kunnu (a non-alcoholic beverage made from corn), and in the afternoon, another corn-based meal. The same thing was repeated in the evening. People were dying because of the poor facilities and the feeding. And when people around me were dying just like that, I felt dehumanised and unsafe. There was no medical care until December 18, 1997, after the death of Maj. Gen. Shehu Yar’Adua. Then the government sent two doctors regularly to give me checkups,” he said in the interview republished by refworld.

For George Mbah, who was Tell’s senior assistant editor, he said he knew he would outlive the Abacha regime.

In his interview, published on refworld, he said, “Throughout my years of incarceration, I had no access to books. When I arrived at Biu Prison in 1995, they said I could only read the Bible and confiscated all the books I had in my possession.

“Throughout 1996, I never received any medical care, despite the fact that I was ill. They would give me tablets. I don’t know whether it was the correct dose because they called it “’half treatment.’ Yet every two or three weeks, I continued to become ill.”

Also, Chris Anyanwu, who was the editor-in-chief and publisher of a weekly, The Sunday Magazine, served three years of her 15-year jail sentence when she was released in June 1998 by Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar.

As published on refworld, she said, “It was a journey that spanned 1,251 days. I moved 10 times through the nation’s most notorious detention centers, through spooky, forsaken prisons. It was a tour of a world which, even in my worst nightmares, I could never have imagined. I had a taste of life at its most raw, perhaps its lowest and, in the process, got a fuller appreciation of human nature and our creator.”

“Without doubt, I suffered unwarranted punishment and a terrible insult. I am not bitter. I only hope that future generations of journalists are spared the same fate,” she added.

The recent police persecution of journalists is hinged on the Cyber Crime Act of 2015, which prohibited and recommended punishment for electronic messages capable of tarnishing the addressee’s image, among other provisions.

But a human rights lawyer, Inibehe Effiong, posted on his X handle on Saturday and said the provision would not stand a test in court.

“The provisions of the infamous Section 24 of the Cybercrimes (Prevention and Prohibition) Act, 2015, that the police have been using to harass Nigerians have been repealed by the National Assembly and replaced with a radically different and new provision. President Tinubu assented to the amended Act in February 2024.

“Under the new Act, posts injurious to a person’s reputation are no longer a crime,” he wrote.

In an interview with our correspondent, the General Secretary of the Committee for the Defence of Human Rights, Gerald Katchy, said that, according to the constitution, any person who was arrested by the law enforcement agency for the commission of a crime must be brought before a court within “24-48 hours.”

“This means that a police officer can detain you for a maximum of 24 hours. It is illegal to detain an accused or suspect beyond the constitutional provision without a court order, and to deny such a person access to his lawyer, family, or anyone is criminal and a breach of the person’s fundamental rights,” he told our correspondent.

He said if the journalist had not been invited before his arrest, “the police’s actions in abducting this journalist is an infringement and one too many, which is condemnable. Infringements like this give room to protest, as seen in 2020. I therefore call for his release immediately or charge to court forthwith.”

Attacks on the press in 1996

The Abacha era offered a catalogue of grim attacks on the media practitioners in the country. For example, Paul Adams of Financial Times was imprisoned; Alex Ibru, The Guardian, was attacked; Hillary Anderson of British Broadcasting Corp was harassed; Jude Sinnee, a newspaper vendor, was imprisoned.

Baguda Kaltho of TheNEWS was killed, while George Onah of The Vanguard and Alphonsus Agborh of The PUNCH were imprisoned. Hassan Anwar of the Middle East News Agency was imprisoned and expelled. Also, Okina Deesor, Radio Rivers, Bayo Onanuga of TheNEWS, Richard Akinnola of National Concord, and Godwin Agbroko of The Week were imprisoned at d

Tags
Abacha-eraabductionsclampdowndetentionsechoesmedia
FacebookTwitterWhatsAppLinkedInEmailLink
Previous post SERAP sues Uba Sani, Wike, others over failure to account for N5.9 trillion, $4.6 billion loans
next post Nigerian female scholar emerges world’s first black woman Ph.D holder in Cybernetics
Related posts
  • Related posts
  • More from author
Headlines

US lawmaker urges Trump to take forceful action over Plateau attack in Nigeria

May 7, 20260
Headlines

Senate boils as Akpabio, Oshiomhole engage in heated exchange during plenary

May 6, 20260
Headlines

TRAGEDY: One dead as vehicles collide on Third Mainland Bridge Lagos

May 5, 20260
Load more
Read also
Inside Akwa Ibom Today

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 20250
News

I never promised to fix national grid in three months — New Power Minister Tegbe

May 8, 20260
Politics

Come seal our office if you can – Turaki-led PDP dares Wike

May 8, 20260
Crime

JUST IN: Finance commissioner facing N4.6 billion fraud charge gets court approval to travel to Saudi Arabia for Hajj

May 8, 20260
News

BREAKING: APC senatorial aspirant arrested after addressing supporters

May 8, 20260
Politics

Judges under pressure to abandon our cases – ADC

May 8, 20260
Politics

‘Tribal war’ in Lagos: APC chieftain vows to work against re-election of Igbo lawmaker

May 8, 20260
Load more

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025

I never promised to fix national grid in three months — New Power Minister Tegbe

May 8, 2026

Come seal our office if you can – Turaki-led PDP dares Wike

May 8, 2026

JUST IN: Finance commissioner facing N4.6 billion fraud charge gets court approval to travel to Saudi Arabia for Hajj

May 8, 2026

BREAKING: APC senatorial aspirant arrested after addressing supporters

May 8, 2026

Judges under pressure to abandon our cases – ADC

May 8, 2026

inside the Hill top newspaper

0 Comments

I never promised to fix national grid in three months — New Power Minister Tegbe

0 Comments

5 burnt to death scooping fuel from fallen tanker

0 Comments

Naira slumps further as dollar scarcity bites harder

0 Comments

BREAKING: Appeal Court sacks Senate Minority Leader, orders election rerun

0 Comments

Again, Trump fined $10,000 for violating gag order

0 Comments

Follow us

FacebookLike our page
InstagramFollow us
YoutubeSubscribe to our channel
WhatsappContact us
Latest news
1

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025
2

HAPPENING NOW: Huge crowds applaud Pope Francis’ coffin as Vatican funeral begins •PHOTOS

April 26, 2025
3

‘They’ve been bought over’ — David Mark-led ADC blasts rival camp as crisis deepens

April 7, 2026
4

Wizkid, Davido, Olamide perform as Detty December begins in Lagos

December 17, 2025
5

Tinubu jets out to Saudi Arabia for Islamic summit

November 10, 2024
6

JUST IN: Lagos govt releases new BRT fares after increase •FULL LIST

February 24, 2026
Popular
1

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025
2

Fernandes hat-trick fires Man Utd into Europa League quarters

March 14, 2025
3

Nigerian students urge Tinubu to raise NYSC allowance to N77,000

August 12, 2024
4

BLOODY FRIDAY: Bandits gun down worshippers at mosque •Many injured, others abducted

September 26, 2025
5

Governor Umo Eno and his First Eleven, by Clement Warrie

February 12, 2025
6

Compromise in education sector is a deafening silence but we pretend all is well — Renowned educator, Afolabi-Ogunyeye

September 24, 2025

About The Frontier

The Frontier is Nigeria’s leading online newspaper. It is published by Okims Media Links Limited headed by Sunny Okim, a veteran journalist who is widely known as The Grandmaster, fondly called so by colleagues and friends for being Nigeria’s pioneer movie journalist.

Most viewed

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025

Minister resigns after admitting to having child with 16-year-old boy

March 22, 2025

Former military president Babangida makes U-turn, says MKO Abiola won June 12 ,1993 election

February 20, 2025

Report on Port Harcourt helicopter crash released

December 17, 2024

University of Ibadan, NECO, 22 others risk delisting from 2025 budget over unaccounted funds

December 19, 2024
Top posts

Categories

  • News4511
  • Politics3999
  • Crime3849
  • International2703
  • Sports2226
  • Business & Economy2101
  • Headlines2060
  • Education1232
  • Matilda Showbiz876
  • Health789
  • Entertainment720
  • Africa451
  • Religion442
  • Environment318
  • Special259
  • Arts & Culture226
  • Hunger protests in Nigeria224
  • Info Tech218
  • Interview175
  • Inside Akwa Ibom Today172
  • Opinion144
  • EyeCare with Dr Priscilia Imade115
  • Advert30
  • Epistles of Anthony Kila19
  • Trends16
  • Local News4

© 2026 The Frontier, Published by Okims Media Links Limited.

designed by winnet services

  • Home
  • Advertise with us
  • Contact