IPI blacklists IGP Egbetokun, two Nigerian governors

The International Press Institute, IPI, Nigeria has listed the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Olukayode Egbetokun, and two governors in its Book of Infamy.

This was during the unveiling of the Book of Infamy by Vice President Kashim Shettima on Tuesday, at the second Annual Conference of IPI Nigeria.

The Institute, however, honoured the Director General of the Department of State Services, DSS, Adeola Oluwatosin Ajayi.

The two governors, who made the list of three persons to first get documented in the Book of Infamy, were those of Akwa Ibom State, Imo Eno; and Niger State, Mohammed Umar Bago.

While Egbetokun was said to have failed to heed the calls by IPI to stop the arbitrary arrests of Journalists nationwide by his operatives, Eno barred the crew of Channels TV from covering the activities of the Akwa Ibom State Government House.

For the Niger State Governor, Bago, he ordered the closure of Badeggi FM, a private radio station.

The Institute said despite its appeals for reconsideration of their decisions which they had no powers to take, both Bago and Eno refused to back down.

The IPI Nigeria described the DG of the DSS, as a listening head of a sensitive government agency who has listened to interventions by the IPI and corrected wrongdoings pointed out to him.

The Minister of Information, Mohammed Idris, in his speech, said an independent press was central to functioning democracy, describing a sure-footed, critical, and independent press as the central nervous system of a functioning democracy.

“But as we gather today, our first duty must be to a shared foundation of facts. We must ask: does this theme describe our present reality, or does it risk anchoring us to a sad past we are actively working to transcend?

“If the theme suggests an active, systemic policy of repression by the current administration, then we must, with respect, interrogate it against the available evidence.

“A dialogue on freedom cannot itself be detached from fact. It is in that spirit of candour and shared purpose that I stand before you today, not to reel out a list of government achievements, but to present evidence and engage in a critical dialogue about the path we are walking together towards a more accountable and sustainable democracy,” he said.