#EndSARS: SERAP,DRL Sue NBC over N9m fine against TV stations
It appears
the end has not yet been heard to the #EndSARS protests as two lawsuits have been filed against the
National Broadcasting Commission over the N3m fine it imposed on three
television stations in relation to their coverage of the #EndSARS protests.
The two suits were filed separately by
Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project(SERAP); while the second one
was filed by a group of lawyers, under the aegis of Digital Rights Lawyers
Initiative.
Both suits
are before the Federal High Court in Abuja.
SERAP, which
filed its suit in collaboration with 261 concerned Nigerians, civil society and
media groups, also joined the Minister of Information and Culture, Lai
Mohammed; and the acting Director-General of the NBC, Prof. Armstrong Idachaba,
as defendants.
The group is
urging the court to declare that the N3m fine imposed by NBC on each
of Channels TV, Africa Independent Television and Arise TV over their
coverage of the #EndSARS protests was “arbitrary, illegal and
unconstitutional.”
It wants the
court to stop NBC from enforcing the fine.
SERAP
contended that the information minister had been making consistent efforts to
gag the press from performing their watchdog role by using broadcasting codes.
The group
said the imposition of N3 million fine on each of Channels TV, Africa
Independent Television, and Arise TV without giving them fair hearing was in
breach of the constitutional rights of the media houses.
“The NBC,
being a regulatory body, is not empowered by law to act as the prosecutor and
the judge; all at the same time. We humbly urge the court to set aside the
unlawful and unconstitutional fines imposed on independent media houses, and to
uphold the sanctity of the Nigerian Constitution, Nigerians’ human rights,
media freedom, and the rule of law,” SERAP said.
It urged the
court to strike down Section 2[n] of the NBC Act and Broadcasting Code relied
upon by the NBC and information minister to impose fines on the three stations.
SERAP argued
that that section was inconsistent sections 22 and 39 of the Nigerian
Constitution which guarantee freedom of expression, access to information, and
media freedom.
Similarly,
DRLI, in the suit filed by its lawyers, Messrs Solomon Okedara and Olumide
Babalola, contended that “the sanction and fine imposed on the television
stations creates a chilling effect on freedom of expression and constitutes an
unjustifiable interference of its members’ right to freedom of expression
particularly, their right to receive ideas and information from the sanctioned
television stations.”
DRLI is
praying the court to set aside the N3m fine and to award N1m damages against
the NBC.
No comments