By Adadareporters
The International Press Centre (IPC), Lagos-Nigeria, Tuesday, condemned the harassment and molestation of Mr Haruna Mohammed, the publisher of WikkiTimes online newspaper, and one of the reporters, Mr Idris Kamal, by the police in Bauchi, Bauchi State.
The condemnation was contained in a statement issued by Toyin Ayoade, IPC’s communications officer.
Adadareporters gathered that the ordeal of the two journalists began on Monday, June 27, 2022, when they honoured an invitation from the state Criminal Investigation and Intelligence Department (SCIID) following a petition by Mr Yakubu Shehu Abdullahi, a member of the House of Representatives representing Bauchi Federal Constituency, concerning a Wikki Times report of May 18, 2022 on the sudden death of the chairman of the All Progressive Peoples Congress (APC) in Bauchi Local Government area of the state.
The statement elaborated that, “The journalists arrived at the station about 10am on Monday, but after making a statement, they were clamped into a cell where they alleged that they were physically assaulted.
“Despite the presence of their lawyer at the police station, they were not set free until about 10 hours later and asked to report back on Tuesday, June 28, 2022 for further interrogation.”
The statement added, “The two journalists again reported at the SCIID Bauchi on Tuesday as directed but were promptly taken before a Bauchi Magistrates’ Court where they were charged for criminal conspiracy, defamation of character and cyber stalking.
“The court ruled that they should be held in custody until tomorrow, Wednesday June 29, 2022.”
IPC, in the statement, expressed worries about the trend of events, and called on the state police command to avoid being used as tools of harassment against the journalists.
“Since the petitioner alleged defamation, the police should have in the first instance advised him to seek legal redress instead of illegally detaining the journalists for 10 hours on Monday, June 27, 2022 and subjecting them to physical and mental harassment in the process,” executive director of IPC, Mr Lanre Arogundade, said in a statement.
He added that it ‘behoves the police authorities in the state to ensure the safety of Mohammed and Kamal’.
Mr Arogundade said journalists should not continue to be treated as endangered species in Nigeria, adding that, ‘in all circumstances, the security agencies must always strive to toe the path of the rule of law in handling complaints or petitions against journalists and other media professionals, just as they should normally do for all citizens’.