My criticisms of the excesses of the online phenomenon in terms of its brazen abuse in an unregulated environment has often made me the target of attacks, with many insisting on quoting the opening paragraph of a piece I once wrote along these lines as if it is a memorial verse, but further developments have shown that indeed, liberal, accommodative, useful and open as the growth of the new media may seem in Nigeria, we may well, if care is not taken, be dealing with a dangerous tool in the hands of the unscrupulous which could drive society towards the lunatic fringe.
The beauty of the new media is its democratic temper. With any
electronic device, anyone at all, can set up a communications unit, using a phone,
a tablet, a laptop, a desktop, and simply occupy the social space and broadcast
information which in a matter of minutes may go viral and condition public
opinion. It grants the person involved absolute freedom, even anonymity,
dangerous anonymity of self, space and location, but the worst part of it is
the freedom from decency, responsibility and conscience. And so while so much
good can be done by persons exchanging information, and as has turned out,
creative jokes and skits which entertain and amuse, a lot of evil can be
committed through resort to blackmail, abuse, and mischief.
This dangerous dimension is beginning to grow in different directions
and the latest that I have seen is what seems to be the emergence of cartels,
or perhaps cabals in the online industry, with various persons organizing
themselves into groups, and if this were to be a sign of freedom of association
exercised by like minds, it would be commendable. But rather what is emerging
is bitter rivalry among the various groups, a fierce struggle for territory,
unhealthy, cut-throat competition, and a desperation to out-do each other. The group warriors are not necessarily fighting
for any great ideal, but ego, power, privilege and access to the corridors of
power.
I happen to have suddenly become a victim in the midst of this
turf-fighting, as my name this week was drawn into a cat fight between two
groups: the Guild of Corporate Online Publishers (GOCOP) and the Online Publishers
Association of Nigeria (OPAN). These are two of the emerging groups but there
are others: Association of Online Bloggers, Association of Nigerian Online
Publishers (ANOP), the Online Magazines Publishers Association (OMPA). And who
knows, there may well be the Association of What’s App Users, the Nigerian
Association of Twitter Voltrons, Association of Nigerian BBM Users, National
Association of Chat Group Administrators, all of them fighting over influence, space,
and patronage. This politicization of the online business can only in the long run
diminish its influence and promote opportunism.
The case that I refer to was triggered by a
meeting in Lagos, between the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai
Mohammed and a group of online publishers under the umbrella of GOCOP. This
prompted a rival group, the OPAN to issue a statement accusing Alhaji Mohammed
of meeting with the wrong group and ignoring the main stakeholders. There has
been serious “blood-sharing” since then. GOCOP issued a rejoinder in which it
attacked OPAN. And my name was brought
in. I was accused of being the spirit
behind OPAN, and an attempt was made to set me up against Femi Adesina, my
successor as Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to the President of
Nigeria. Femi was given special praise, he being a Trustee of GOCOP, so the
whole thing is projected as OPAN being pro-Jonathan and GOCOP being pro-Buhari.
I was also accused of having influenced the Corporate Affairs Commission
to block the registration of NOPA, the first name that the other group had
chosen when it sought formal registration. I was alleged to have used the
powers of the Presidency to victimize members of then NOPA, who eventually
adopted a new name and got registered. But obviously, the aggrieved were
looking for an opportunity to go after me. And they believe the time is now right
and that their facts are right, hence they threatened to release “documents”.
They are wrong. Here are the facts: I was invited to be a Trustee of OPAN in 2010
when I was still Chairman of the Editorial Board of The Guardian. I was at the time involved either as a Trustee or
contributor to many social causes - motherless children’s homes, special
children, book reading clubs, girl child education projects, and hence, adding
to that list a group that defined its objective as developing standards in the
emerging online space was not a problem for me. I agreed to be a Trustee of
OPAN and I made inputs into the drafting of the philosophy of the group. It had
become clear by then that the online space was bound to grow and that there was
a need for an articulation of ethical and professional standards, which may not
be officially imposed but which could provide a basis for the insistence on a
responsible use of the internet to promote serious issues. OPAN secured
registration with the CAC, but it remained in a formative stage throughout the
period I was in office, and was only formally launched late 2015. I did not even
attend the launching ceremony. Having seen that the group had finally found its
rhythm and its objectives properly defined, I offered to step down from the
Board of Trustees. I got to know of the
bitter fight over CAC registration between GOCOP and OPAN in the press release
issued by the former.
Let me make this clear: I could not have been involved in that fight. The
CAC is a statutory body and I believe it is in a position to defend its
integrity. Anyone knows that the CAC conducts name-search before registering
any organization and where any conflict in identity is subsequently reported,
it has its own mechanism for resolving such. If NOPA and OPAN were fighting
over nomenclature, it was the job of the CAC to resolve that, not the
Presidency. In any case, my office could not have supported one group of online
publishers against another, because that would have been
counter-productive. My assignment
required me to relate regularly with website owners, bloggers, and all
categories of journalists and they all published our materials. I have made it
clear privately that I probably received more support from members of GOCOP,
many of whom I had always known and with whom I had shared happier moments, particularly
at the St Bottles’ Cathedral in Lagos: our hang-out in those days.
But I see that twice in the past
eight months, there have been curious attempts to pitch me against my
successor, Femi Adesina. In the imagination of a dubious minority, I am
supposed to be fighting him and make his work difficult. I can imagine the kind
of stories that may have been going back and forth, invented by persons looking
for what to eat. I have been there and I know how it is. But Femi and I have
never fought over anything and we have absolutely no reason to fight. I am out.
He is in. Life goes on. I have nothing against him or the PMB government. In
2015, the Nigerian people made a choice and spoke. It is a choice that we
respect.
But as if all that is not plain enough, the
latest that I have seen is a 2012 private e-mail “document” purportedly leaked
to Sahara Reporters giving the impression that I worked with an online group to
undermine Sahara Reporters in defence of the Jonathan Government, and of course
the sub-text is to link me with the current war of the online publishers. This has
to do with an e-mail, which the Association of Nigerian Online Publishers (ANOP)
sent to a third party which was forwarded to me. I was then hearing about ANOP
for the first time.
I forwarded the mail to the main promoter of OPAN, the only one of such groups
that was known to me then and I only wanted to know if this was the same group,
given the striking similarity. The leaked mail is one of many such unsolicited
proposals and suggestions that came to my desk. Nothing came out of it
thereafter, and I had no reason to worry about that innocuous incident until
now. I took an oath of office to defend the interests of the people, President and
Government of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and I did my bit, but it was not
the style of that administration or my office to intimidate, gag, frustrate or
undermine the free media. I had direct access to Omoyele Sowore, the publisher
of Sahara Reporters.
Throughout my four years on the job, he used every single press release
that we issued and always listened to my many protestations. He always insisted
however, that he had his facts, and that he knew more insiders than I could
ever imagine. I was always shocked how State House documents and inside stories
regularly found their way to his desk, and how on the day the President’s
brother died, he had published the story even before anyone in Aso Rock knew. If
the leaked e-mail proves anything, it is that he and his own colleagues are involved
in a bitter rivalry, and that there is indeed a war of online operators and this
can only get worse with everyone these days, becoming a blogger or online
publisher. This poses a serious challenge for media,
reputation, and perception managers who must continuously swim in an ocean of
sharks, alligators and piranhas. If you relate with A, you could offend B. And
if you receive a mail from C, you could get into trouble, not knowing which
cartel or cabal you are dealing with.
The truth, if we must say so, is that the social media in Nigeria has
become a battle-ground for survival. It is no longer about young people playing
with a phone or a laptop, it is big business, and where the stomach or sheer
rivalry, is involved, we can see that persons are ready to shed blood, shred
reputations and break jaws. It is most unfortunate that this positive force
that could be used for the good of society is finally going the way of all
things. The other truth is that the big war of communications is no longer
fought on the pages of newspapers, but online and all the bad habits of old
have been transported, without any ethical restraint. This is where the real danger
lies.
The challenge is to insist that online journalists, publishers, bloggers
and tweeters must be held down to certain prudential standards of practice. The
in-fighting is unnecessary. The various associations can be useful as vehicles
of self-regulation, and for promoting values and best options. They should not become special purpose
mechanisms for patronizing politicians and political office holders.
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