By Dianabasi Effiong
The International Press Centre (IPC) Lagos-Nigeria, through its Safety and Protection of Journalists (SPJ) hub, has condemned the unlawful detention of Sodeeq Atanda, a senior reporter with the Foundation for Investigative Journalism (FIJ).
Atanda was arrested by the Ekiti State Police Command on September 9, in Ado-Ekiti.
Similarly, the Media Rights Agenda (MRA) condemned the alarming rise in attacks, intimidation, and harassment of journalists across Nigeria, including the recent arrest and detention of Mr. Hassan Mai-Waya Kangiwa in Kebbi State on the orders of Governor Nasir Idris, following the circulation of a video that exposed the deplorable state of facilities at the Kangiwa General Hospital.
The groups made their views known in separate statements on Thursday by Melody Akinjiyan, Press Freedom Officer, SPJ-Hub, and Idowu Adewale, Communications Officer, Media Rights Agenda, respectively.
According to Akinjiyan, Information reaching IPC-SPJ Hub stated that, “the Police had summoned Atanda based on a petition by Abayomi Fasina, the Vice Chancellor of the Federal University Oye-Ekiti (FUOYE), complaining of cyberbullying, blackmail and criminal defamation.”
The information further stated that, “Atanda was detained at the headquarters of the Ekiti State Police Command for over eight hours, on the orders of the Ekiti State Commissioner of Police, Joseph Eribo, upon honouring the invitation. He was also subjected to inhumane treatment by the Police officers who forced him to walk barefoot in the premises of the Police headquarters and gave him stringent bail conditions.”
The Executive Director of IPC, Mr Lanre Arogundade, in a statement said, “this action by the Police is clearly an attempt to further stifle press freedom and intimidate journalists reporting issues of public interest.
“The Police should desist from being used by elites to assault, arrest, and detain journalists; instead, they should uphold the tenets of democracy”.
SPJ-Hub is also calling on the Kano State Police Command to desist from intimidating and harassing Abdulaziz Aliyu, a reporter with Waraka Online TV, who has been constantly maltreated and was detained over a publication.
“Yakubu Salisu, Chairman of the Association of Kano Online Journalists (ASKOJ) confirmed this incident to our Press Freedom Officer, stating that, “Abdulaziz Aliyu was detained over a story he published some months back.”
The SPJ-Hub reiterated that if the Police had issues with stories published or with the concerned journalists, the right and lawful process should be taken to seek redress instead of constant self-help.
In its statement, the MRA condemned what it called escalating attacks on journalists while urging international pressure to end impunity.
The MRA also warned that the trend, if unchecked, posed a grave threat to media freedom, freedom of expression, and citizens’ right of access to information.
It called on regional and international human rights mechanisms to take urgent measures to redress the situation by closely monitoring Nigeria’s compliance with its human rights obligations and holding the government accountable for breaches of those obligations.
It stated: “Hassan had posted a video online showing an elderly patient lying helplessly on a bare metal bed frame without a mattress, sparking outrage across the country and renewed calls for accountability in the health sector.
“Rather than addressing the clear neglect and decay in the hospital system revealed in the footage, Governor Idris chose to punish the journalist by criminalising his work and violating his rights as a journalist.
“According to eyewitnesses, security operatives stormed Hassan’s residence in Kangiwa town late in the night of Sunday, September 7, 2025, arresting him in front of his family. His phones and work equipment were seized during the raid, raising further concerns about the violation of his privacy and professional rights.
“Hassan was initially held at a local police station before being transferred to Birnin Kebbi, the State capital, reportedly on the Governor’s orders. Since then, police authorities have refused to disclose the charges against him or grant access to his lawyers, effectively keeping him cut off from his family, friends, and legal representation.”
According to the MRA, the incident is not isolated but part of a disturbing pattern of attacks against journalists in Nigeria who are carrying out their professional duties.
The statement added that Mr John Gbadamosi, MRA’s Programme Officer, in a statement issued in Lagos said that, “these repeated incidents highlight the deteriorating environment for media freedom in Nigeria.
“The culture of impunity, enabled by government, has emboldened perpetrators, both state and non-state actors, who now attack journalists without fear of consequences.”
He called on the State Government to immediately and unconditionally release Hassan.
He further advised Governor Idris, “to desist from persecuting journalists and instead focus on addressing the decay in public infrastructure, which his government has a responsibility to fix.”
Gbadamosi also identified recent cases of attacks against journalists in Nigeria to include, among others, the beating of Olatunji Adebayo, a correspondent with The Punch newspaper, in June 2025 and the seizure of his equipment by security operatives while he was covering a protest in Ibadan, Oyo State.
He also stated that other incidents included the July 2025 harassment of Blessing Okonkwo, a freelance broadcast journalist in Anambra State, who was also assaulted by police officers who accused her of “unauthorized reporting” while she was filming a demolition exercise.
According to Gbadamosi, Ibrahim Garba, a Daily Trust photojournalist in Kano, was detained for hours in August 2025 and physically assaulted by political party loyalists while he was covering a campaign rally.
He also recalled “the harassment, intimidation, and verbal assault on Ms Ladi Bala, Transport Correspondent of the Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) and former President of the Nigerian Association of Women Journalists (NAWOJ), by Mr. Kayode Opeifa, Managing Director of the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC), on Aug. 27, 2025, while she was covering the derailment of a train along the Abuja-Kaduna rail corridor.
“He is reported to have disrupted Ms Bala’s live reporting and ordered security operatives to bundle her from the scene, while threatening to report her to security agencies, the Presidency, and NTA management to ensure that she is dismissed,” Gbadamosi said.
He said that Sodeeq Atanda, a senior reporter with the Foundation for Investigative Journalism (FIJ), was arrested by the Ekiti State Police Command on September 9, 2025, in Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti State, after he honoured an invitation by the Police over his reporting exposing alleged sexual harassment reportedly perpetrated by Abayomi Fasina, the Vice Chancellor of the Federal University Oye-Ekiti (FUOYE).
Gbadamosi also recalled “the unwarranted summoning of Fisayo Soyombo, founder of the FIJ, by the Ekiti State Police Command, directing him to appear before the Police in Ado-Ekiti on September 15, 2025, for alleged conspiracy, criminal defamation, cyberbullying, and blackmail.”
MRA enjoined the Federal Government to order immediate, independent, and transparent investigations into all reported attacks on journalists and prosecute the perpetrators.
It added: “There is a subsisting order by a Federal High Court in Abuja made on February 16, 2024, directing the Federal Government, among other things, to investigate, prosecute, and punish perpetrators of all attacks against journalists.”
The MRA called on the federal government to tow the path of the rule of law and end the pervasive culture of impunity for crimes against journalists by complying with the court’s orders and ensuring that perpetrators of violence and other forms of attacks against journalists were brought to justice.
The organisation also urged the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR), particularly its Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Expression and Access to Information in Africa as well as the UN Human Rights Council and the UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Expression, to engage the Nigerian Government and raise, as a matter of urgent concern, the country’s growing attacks on journalists and demand accountability for such attacks, and safeguards for media professionals.
Gbadamosi also said: “Nigeria has committed itself to upholding human rights standards at both regional and global levels. It must now be held to account for its failure to live up to these commitments and protect journalists and the media. The international community cannot afford to remain silent in the face of these attacks.”