Invoking the law, in July 2016, the country's State Security Service arrestedJones Abiri, the publisher and chief editor of Weekly Source newspaper in Bayelsa State, for alleged militant sympathies, then released him two years later. He was then re-arrested in March 2019, this time spending more than half a year in prison before being granted bail.
Another journalist, Samuel Ogundipe, who at the time worked with Premium Times, was arrested for five days in August 2018 for being "a threat to national security". The following year, the government also arrested Ibrahim Dan-Halilu, an editor at the Daily Trust newspaper, while the publisher of Cross River Watch news site, Agba Jalingo, was arrested in 2019, 2021 and 2022 – even after the Economic Community of West African States' Court ordered the government to release him and pay damages in 2021.
By 2021, seven years into Buhari's rule and two years into his second term, the Nigerian Union of Journalists had recorded 300 violations, affecting about 500 journalists, media workers and media houses. In July of that year, as journalists faced personal intimidation, Nigeria's broadcast regulator, the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC), issued a letter telling the media to stop reporting insecurity in too much detail. The same body later fined Channels TV for an interview with an opposition leader during the run-up to the 2023 election.
All of this, of course, came in the same term in which Buhari banned Twitter access in the country for seven months. The social media platform had deleted a post the president had made threatening Igbo people with violence over the destruction of public infrastructure in their region, invoking Nigeria's 1965 Civil War that saw the mass murder of over one million people, mostly from the country's southeast.
This suppression of freedom of expression and the media was the most stark it had ever been in Nigeria's democratic era. Rather than being the "reformed democrat" he had been marketed as, Buhari brought some of the darkness and regression of the military era to a new generation.
Millions of young Nigerians had formed part of his base, believing in his ability to help Nigeria shed its corrupt skin and emerge as a nation capable of achieving its vast potential. But by the time he left office in 2023, another generation had been cruelly educated in the Nigerian Way, learning that ethnic allegiance, money and might are the currencies of power, and this country cannot work for more than one group at a time. Buhari made clear he was a president who thought of the country as a bus full of disobedient children who there was no point talking to, who for whatever maddening reason could not simply keep quiet and do what they were asked.
Few occasions better demonstrate Buhari's draconian policies – media suppression, restricted speech and the weaponising of the justice system – than the youth-driven #EndSars protests of 2020. A video of the extrajudicial killing of a man in Delta State by police officers from the infamous Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) went viral, sparking protests that spread across nine states from 3 October 2020, stopping traffic and gripping media attention.
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