close
Friday, January 14, 2022

Nigerian media helping Boko Haram, bandits succeed: COAS

“If their (insurgents) activities are denied media publicity, fifty percent of the military’s job would have been done.”

• January 13, 2022
Lieutenant-General Faruk Yahaya,
A photo of Lieutenant-General Faruk Yahaya used to illustrate the story [Photo credit: Premium Times Nigeria]

The Chief of Army Staff, Faruk Yahaya, on Thursday said media reporting of the activities of bandits and Boko Haram terrorists contribute to their victory.

“Insurgents and bandits thrive on the publicity they get from a section of the media,” Mr Yahaya said.

Mr Yahaya disclosed this in a statement by Nigerian Army spokesperson, Onyeama Nwachuku, adding that “if their (insurgents) activities are denied media publicity, fifty percent of the military’s job would have been done.”

Mr Faruk further said that the “expectations of the NA are that the media will continue to support the efforts of the military, as part of their patriotic duty, by giving publicity to troops’ operations, which he said, will undoubtedly shore up troops’ morale and fighting will.”

The COAS will not be the first government official to blame the media for some of the Buhari regime’s notorious and unending failures. 

In October 2021, minister of information and culture, Lai Mohammed, also accused the media of bullying the Buhari regime, whereas, it is the regime that has been pushing to gag the media and has sponsored several bills to that effect at the national assembly.

In 2017, former Chief of Army Staff and now Nigeria’s ambassador to the Benin Republic, Tukur Buratai, ordered the clamping down on Premium Times for refusing to pull down a story about the Nigerian army.

For exposing how the son of Chief of Staff Ibrahim Gambari, Bolaji Gambari, runs a cabal within Aso Rock, the Buhari regime ordered telcos to block readers from accessing the Peoples Gazette’s website.

Also, in June 2021, the regime banned Twitter for deleting a tweet in which Mr Buhari threatened a repeat of the civil war genocide against young Igbos in the South-Eastern part of the country, a development that was globally condemned as repressive and anti-democratic.

More from Peoples Gazette

Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN)

Economy

Leadership Tussle: Petroleum marketers warn of trouble, ask police to intervene

“We are calling on the Nigeria Police Force to ensure that such persons are apprehended to forestall breakdown of law and order.”

Potential police officers in camp during recruitment

Politics

Southern Nigerians ignoring police job application: Frank Mba

“Interested applicants are urged to log on to the NPF recruitment portal to register before the expiration of the new deadline.”

Vice President Yemi Osinbajo

Politics

Osinbajo blames civil servants for Nigeria’s underdevelopment

“Great economies and great nations, prosperity and abundance of nations and communities are created by men and not spirits.”

Burkina Faso team

Sport

AFCON 2021: Burkina Faso beat Cape Verde

Burkina Faso blew open the battle to qualify from Group A of the 2021 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) as they beat Cape Verde 1-0 on Thursday in Yaounde.

Pegasus

World

Israeli NSO spyware used to hack journalists’ phones repeatedly: Report

The Citizen Lab said in its report that it had identified a Pegasus operator working almost exclusively in El Salvador in early 2020.

Police

States

Ebonyi: Police declare four brothers going to wedding party missing

The missing persons are Ogonnaya Chukwu, 33, and Sunday Chukwu, 31, dark in complexion; Chinedu Nwite, 30, and Ogbonnaya Ekuma, 30, fair in complexion.