Big Brother Benin: On Journalists, Jihadists, and Jurists

Big Brother Benin: On Journalists, Jihadists, and Jurists

These are interesting times. 

A PDP member is the 8th Minister of the FCT under an opposition APC government.

An LP prosecution Lawyer, Mike Ozekome, hugs the victorious defendant, Vice President Shettima, just after his client lost, right there in the court.

A Journalist is held as a Jihadist in a city, not Benin.

A Nigerian journalist, Damilola Faith Ayeni, was arrested by authorities in the Benin Republic, a country neighbouring Nigeria on the West, while on a trip to the country for his environmental journalism work. According to the FIJ, a man who identified himself as the ‘Commissioner of the Central Police Station of Parakou in Benin’ claimed that Ayeni was being held for being a jihadist. 

Despite evidence presented to them that Ayeni is a journalist and not a jihadist, the police continued to insist on their claims.

But all of that is in the past now. A Benionise court freed him after intense pressure from the Nigerian Embassy in Benin, international media societies, and civil rights organisations.  

Before Ayeni became a full-fledged journalist with the FIJ, he wrote about environmental challenges in Africa, particularly Nigeria, and used self-sponsored media (TV and Radio) features to engage the populace and leaders, his Tired Earth profile read back in 2019. 

The profile also indicated that Ayeni, who holds a Degree in Forest Resources and Wildlife Management, initiated the Students Enlightenment Program that discusses environmental science, sustainable interaction with the environment, climate change, and climate action and justice in different high schools in Nigeria. 

He also coordinated the Fridays For Future movement in Nigeria. The movement is “a youth-led and organised movement that began in August 2018, after 15-year-old Greta Thunberg and other young activists sat in front of the Swedish parliament every schoolday for three weeks, to protest against the lack of action on the climate crisis.” 

FIJ reported that the police in Benin Republic demanded a bribe of 800,000 CFA (around N1.2 million) to secure Ayeni’s release. 

However, data shows that the country’s treatment of this journalist, as unsavoury as it could be, still pales when compared with the level of indignities and harm that journalists suffer in Nigeria.

In fact, Nigeria’s record with regard to the safety of journalists within its borders is worse than the average of the world’s six divisions – the Americas, Africa, Asia Pacific, Central and Eastern Europe, the European Union and the Balkans, and the Middle East and North Africa (MENA).

However, both Benin, ranked 112th, and Nigeria, ranked 123rd, are placed below the median rank of 100th for the ranking of countries in Africa.

This shows that both countries rank below the global median rank of 91st and the African median rank of 100th.

Journalists: Are they freer in Benin than Nigeria?

Yes. Journalists are freer in Benin than in Nigeria, but Journalism is freer in Nigeria than in Benin. 

At least Damilola Ayeni’s wrongful arrest and swift trial in the Benin Republic agree with the data here.

As problematic as Benin’s economic and political limitations might be for a maverick media, it is more tolerant of the journalist’s personal rights and physical safety.

The data shows that the journalistic establishment in Benin Republic suffers more economic and political repressions than that in Nigeria.

The Reporters Without Borders (RSF) methodology explains these contexts of media freedom thus: 

Political Freedom

Economic Freedom

Sociocultural Freedom

Legal Freedom

Safety

The questions concern journalists’ safety. For this purpose, freedom is defined as the ability to identify, gather and disseminate news and information in accordance with journalistic methods and ethics, without unnecessary risk of:

It appears then that the comparative goodwill that the Nigerian government shows towards the media’s economic and political independence, it then overcompensates through legal and physical threats against journalists.

Conversely, there might be fewer legal and physical threats against journalists in Benin because the media ecosystem in the country is already constricted economically and politically more than in Nigeria. This reduces the need to stifle voices of dissent through legal and physical threats, as in Nigeria.

Jihadists: Are they freer in Nigeria than in Benin?

Yes, Jihadists are freer in Nigeria than in Benin, going by how long terrorists have thrived in Nigeria compared to Benin.

Yet, Benin has been facing an unprecedented rise in cases of Terrorism since 2019.

Exit mobile version