The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has condemned in the strongest terms the continued detention of four Nigerian journalists who are facing fresh charges over a report tying the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Guaranty Trust Bank, to fraud claims.
The journalists whose criminal charges were amended by prosecutors on October 14 are; Olurotimi Olawale, Precious Eze Chukwunonso, Roland Olonishuwa, and Seun Odunlami.
The head of CPJ’s Africa Programme, from New York, Angela Quintal, said, “Nigerian authorities should release journalists Olurotimi Olawale, Precious Eze Chukwunonso, Roland Olonishuwa, and Seun Odunlami, and end the deepening criminalization of the press.”
Quintal added, “Nigerian authorities’ additional charges against these four journalists emphasizes their commitment to sending a chilling message to journalists across the country.”
Olawale, an editor of the privately owned National Monitor newspaper; Chukwunonso, publisher of the privately owned News Platform website; Olonishuwa, a reporter with the privately owned Herald newspaper; and Odunlami, publisher of privately owned Newsjaunts website; were newly charged with making “false and misleading allegations” on social media with intent to “extort” and “threaten” the management of Guaranty Trust Bank, as well as causing “harm” to the bank’s reputation, according the October 14 charge sheet.
The alleged crimes fall under sections 24(2)(c) and 27(1)(a) and (b) of Nigeria’s Cybercrimes Act and sections 408, 422, and 507 of Nigeria’s criminal code.
If found guilty under the criminal code, the journalists could face up to 14 years in prison for violating section 408, seven years for violating section 422, and three months for section 507.
Under the Cybercrimes Act, the journalists could face five years in prison with a fine of 15 million naira (US$9,175) for violating section 24 and seven years in prison for violating section 27.
Recall that the journalists have been jailed since late September over reporting that implicated Segun Agbaje, chief executive officer of GTBank, in alleged fraud worth 1trillion naira (US$600 million).
The journalists were charged on September 26 with violating the Cybercrimes Act, which was reformed in February but still left journalists vulnerable to prosecution, as CPJ warned.
GTBank’s chief communications officer, Oyinade Adegite, had told CPJ before the charges were amended, that the journalists’ reporting was “defamatory” and that the bank had sought to have the journalists charged with cybercrime for it. SaharaReporters
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