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Nigeria fines Multichoice, others for airing BBC report on banditry -statement

By:
Reuters
Updated: Aug 3, 2022, 21:06 UTC

By Camillus Eboh ABUJA (Reuters) -Nigeria's broadcast regulator has fined Multichoice Nigeria Ltd, part of a South African pay-TV group, and others 5 million naira ($12,013.74) each for airing a BBC report that it said "glorified the activities of bandits and undermines national security."

Nigeria fines Multichoice, others for airing BBC report on banditry -statement

By Camillus Eboh

ABUJA (Reuters) -Nigeria’s broadcast regulator has fined Multichoice Nigeria Ltd, part of a South African pay-TV group, and others 5 million naira ($12,013) each for airing a BBC report that it said “glorified the activities of bandits and undermines national security.”

The National Broadcasting Commission said in a statement on Wednesday that the outlets had until Aug. 30 to pay.

It also fined local channel Trust TV, part of the group that owns the prominent Daily Trust newspaper, for its own report on banditry.

“The Commission wishes to seize this opportunity to advise broadcasters to be circumspect and deliberate in the choice and carriage of contents deleterious to Nigeria’s national security,” NBC said in a statement.

The Daily Trust quoted its management as saying, “We wish to state unequivocally that as a television station, we believe we were acting in the public interest by shedding light on the thorny issue of banditry.”

“This story is overwhelmingly in the public interest and the BBC stands by its journalism,” the BBC said in an emailed statement.

Multichoice had no immediate comment.

Armed criminals, known locally as bandits, have kidnapped thousands of Nigerians over the past two years.

Free speech and democracy activists in Africa’s most populous country have raised the alarm over what they say are erosions to freedom of expression in recent years, including last year’s ban on social media platform Twitter.

Nigeria has a presidential election in February in which deteriorating security nationwide could play a prominent role.

(Reporting by Camillus Eboh in Abuja and Libby George and MacDonald Dzirutwe in Lagos, additional reporting by Felix Onuah and Promit Mukherjee in Johannesburg; editing by Jonathan Oatis, Sandra Maler, Cynthia Osterman and Marguerita Choy)

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