Tag: NPAN

  • NPAN condoles with Iwuanyanwu’s family

    NPAN condoles with Iwuanyanwu’s family

    The Newspaper Proprietors’ Association of Nigeria (NPAN), yesterday condoled with the family of the Publisher of Champion Newspapers and the President-General of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Chief Engr. Dr. Emmanuel Chukwuemeka Iwuanyanwu.

    The late publisher died on Thursday.

    NPAN  in a letter  signed by the  President, Kabiru A. Yusuf,  and addressed to the Group Managing Director Champion Newspapers, Dr. Nwadiuto Iheakanwa,  said it was consoled by the enviable legacies the late businessman left behind.

    Part of the statement reads:

    “It is with great sadness that we received the news yesterday, of the death of your father, frontline businessman, publisher, and an esteemed member of our Association, Chief (Dr.) Emmanuel Iwumanyanwu, the Ahaejiagmba Ndigbo.

    “He was 82.

    “An engineer by training, Chief Iwunyanwu bestrode the business world leaving an indelible mark in aviation, insurance, road construction, sports, and newspapering.

    “His venture into the newspaper business with the emergence of Champion Newspapers on October 1, 1988, changed the dynamics of newspapering in the country.

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    “The paper pioneered colour printing among Nigerian newspapers and was among the first to set the stage for simultaneous printing, as the paper rolled out from presses in Lagos and Owerri, giving readers in the East the experience of reading the same news with their Lagos/western counterparts.

    “Chief Iwuanyanwu was a sports enthusiast and for a very long time,  his football club Iwuanyanwu Nationale,  rode the crest of competitive football locally and challenged for trophies on the continent.

    “A colossus of no mean repute, his passage has created a deep void in the nation’s socio-development landscape.

    “We are consoled by the enviable legacies he left as a solid politician, frontline businessman, and a patriot.

    On behalf of the Executive Council of our esteemed Association, we commiserate with you and your  entire family,” the statement said.

  • NPAN commiserates with Ekpu over wife’s death

    NPAN commiserates with Ekpu over wife’s death

    The Newspaper Proprietors’ Association of Nigeria (NPAN) has condoled with Mr. Ray Ekpu over the death of his wife, Uyai. Mrs. Ekpu was 73.

    In a condolence letter signed by its Chairman, Kabiru Yusuf, the NPAN expressed shock at the death of Ekpu’s wife, adding that her demise has created a huge gap in the nation’s socio-development landscape.

    The NPAN said the deceased enviable legacies as a thoroughbred profession, the values she held as a bridge builder and her exemplary disposition for community service, will outlive her.

    The letter reads: “It is with great shock that we received the news of the death of our sister, friend and your better half. A quintessential management and training specialist and seasoned administrator,her passage has created a deep void in the nation’s socio-development landscape.

    Read Also: NPAN announces new cover price for newspapers

    “On behalf of the Executive Council of our esteemed association, we commiserate with you and your entire family. We pray that the Almighty God will console and uphold each and every one of you, once again our condolences.”

    The late Uyai was a senior staff of the Centre for Management Development (CMD). She retired in 2011 as an Acting Director, Management Education and Training Department.

  • NPAN announces new cover price for newspapers

    NPAN announces new cover price for newspapers

    Newspapers cover price will rise from next week, Newspaper Proprietors’ Association of Nigeria (NPAN) has said.

    The association hinged the decision to raise the cover price on high production costs and the prevailing economic situation.

    NPAN’s Executive Secretary, Mr. Feyi Smith, noted that inflation and the devaluation of the naira had had negative impact on members’ production costs and profit margins.

    In a statement, Smith said that member newspapers retained the current cover prices for over four years, despite inflation doubling within the same period.

    The statement reads: “With effect from January 2, 2024, members of the Newspaper Proprietors’ Association of Nigeria (NPAN), will effect changes in the cover prices of their newspaper titles.

    “Our association took this difficult decision after a careful review of the current economic situation and our members’ production costs.

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    “In the last few years, inflation and the devaluation of the naira have had very serious negative effects on our members’ production costs and eaten deeply into their profit margins.

    “Nevertheless, our members retained the current cover prices for over four years, while inflation more than doubled within the same period.

    “We acknowledge that the negative effects of the tough economic climate are felt by our readers. It is for this reason that publishers have borne the brunt of high production costs for the last four years without adjusting cover prices.

    “We hope that this price increase would meet with the understanding of our readers even as we continue to do our best to take advantage of technology and better collaboration amongst publishers to improve the quality of our products.” 

  • No to siege on the press, says npan

    The Newspaper Proprietors’ Association of Nigeria (NPAN) has received with shock the news of the Nigerian Army’s siege to the Daily Trust offices in Abuja, Lagos and Maiduguri over the weekend; arresting an editor and reporter in addition to seizure of computers thereby disrupting the operation of that newspaper.

    Although the unwholesome  raid was called off on the order of the Presidency, and the Army has explained that its action was warranted by the violation of the Official Secret Act by the newspaper giving prior notice of military strategy and tactics to Boko Haram insurgents,  the siege left in its trail panic and anger reminscient of the military era brutalisation of the press and the people.

    The last time in this Constitutional dispensation when the Army violated Constitutional guarantee of free speech was in June 2014 when the logistics for distribution of newspapers was wantonly disrupted and newspapers confiscated across the country on spurious allegation that materials “with grave security implications were being moved across the country through newsprint related consignments.”

    That action warranted an apology and payment of token atonement to the newspaper houses by the Federal Government, although same was later criminalised and newspapers made to make refunds to the EFCC.

    The weekend  siege on the Daily Trust newspaper premises, was clearly unconstitutional, without due process and   an act of self help. Additionally, it showed  a poor appreciation of the advancement in information dissemination in the global village where news is disseminated at the touch of a keyboard and not necessarily in a fixed address.  This is 2019 and those who gave the vexatious order ought to know better.

    The NPAN condemns, in very strong terms, the siege on Daily Trust, the arrest and detention of its staff as well as seizure of its computers.

    Where an infraction is alleged, the best option is to follow due process and civility;  not kneejerk, not intimidation and spread of fear in the civil society.

    We have gone too far in search of law and order regime than to countenance such display of raw power and emotion over due process.

  • FG secures support of NPAN

    The Federal Government has secured the commitment of the Newspapers Proprietors Association of Nigeria ( NPAN ) to remain patriotic and committed to national development in the discharge of their statutory duty.

    The agreement was reached in Lagos at a meeting between the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed and members of the association.

    Briefing newsmen after the closed door meeting, the minister said that the NPAN members made it clear that they did not constitute opposition block to government in the discharge of their duty as watchdog and fourth estate of the realm.

    “It has been an exciting meeting that gave us the opportunity to exchange views and certain perceptions were discussed.

    “But most importantly, I have come out much more relieved and much more confident that all that we must continue to do is more dialogue between government and the media.

    “They have made it absolutely clear that they do not constitute opposition block to government, but on the other hand, they will like to be carried along and be taken into confidence about government activities

    “They appreciated the challenges the government is facing but advised that we need to do more in the management of perceptions,” he said.

    The minister said that NPAN made other contributions and recommendations, which he would take to President Muhammadu Buhari and his colleagues in Council, for deliberations and actions.

    “All they need is more dialogue. As a matter of fact, they suggested regular media briefings with different strata of the leadership.

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    “I am leaving this meeting a happier man because they have pledged their patriotism and commitment to this country.

    “They noted that as long as there is adequate dialogue between the media and the government, the frictions and tensions which we have had over some times will disappear.” he said.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the meeting was attended by the Chairman of NPAN and publisher of “This Day” newspaper, Nduka Obaigbena, and the publisher of “Vanguard” newspaper, Sam Amuka.

    The publishers of “Daily Times”, Fidelis Anosike, “The Source” magazine, Comfort Obi, representative of “The Guardian” as well as Alhaji Isa Funtua , among others also attended the meeting.

  • NPAN, editors, IPC slam EFCC raid on The Sun

    The Newspaper Proprietors’ Association of Nigeria (NPAN), the Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) and the International Press Centre (IPC) Lagos-Nigeria have condemned the invasion of the premises of The Sun Publishing Limited by heavily armed operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) in the early hours of Monday.

    The fierce-looking operatives prevented workers of the organisation from either entering or leaving its premises and, in the process, disrupted the circulation processes.

    In separate statements, NPAN, NGE and IPC said they received the news of the invasion with grave concern.

    NPAN President Nduka Obaigbena’s statement reads: “Facts before the NPAN indicate that the EFCC operatives swooped on the newspaper in the early morning of June 12,  while Nigerians were commemorating the historic day of free expression, and  ordered  security men to take them on a guided tour of the premises of the newspaper.

    “The EFCC operatives subsequently prevented journalists and staff from performing their constitutional duties, and abridging their rights to free speech by preventing those who were in the premises from leaving, and others reporting for duty from entering the premises.

    “Although the EFCC  said they were there to enforce a 10-year old Interim Order of Forfeiture on the shareholding of Sun Newspapers, the editors of the Sun Newspapers said the EFCC officials were there on a vengeance and intimidation mission to settle scores on several stories published by the newspaper, including the alleged ownership of certain properties by the wife of the EFCC Acting Chairman for which the Acting  Chairman had threatened libel lawsuits.

    “Instead of lawsuits,  the EFCC operatives raided the newspaper offices to revive a 10-year old  Interim Order of Forfeiture that is already before an appellate court.

    “Given these developments, it is our considered view that the EFCC, being a state institution and a creation of the law, cannot be above the law: and the manner of the invasion tends to suggest that the EFCC was out on a self-help mission, a voyage to intimidate journalists, criminalise journalism  and cower free speech.

    “We should continue to remind ourselves that this crude tactics of invasion of  media houses and harassment of journalists did not work in the past,  is not going to work now, and will never work. It is unknown to the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    “We call on the Federal Government of Nigeria and all people of reason  and goodwill to call the EFCC to order for the greater good of the Federal Republic Nigeria and the rule of law.”

    NGE President Funke Egbèmode, in a statement, said the unwarranted siege to the company subjected workers to crude intimidation, psychological and emotional trauma.

    The EFCC, she added, had accused The Sun of publishing pro-Biafra, Boko Haram and Niger Delta militant stories.

    The statement reads: “The latest action of the EFCC on a newspaper house is a sad reminder of the dark years of military dictatorship and a deliberate effort to muzzle the press.

    “As a statutory agency birthed by an Act of Parliament in a democracy, we had expected the EFCC to explore civil means of addressing perceived infraction by a critical stakeholder in the Nigerian

    democratic project.

    “Rather than see the Fourth Estate of the Realm as an opposition, the commission should realise that the media is an indispensable partner in its fight against corruption.

    “The Guild notes that the latest affront on The Sun by operatives of the EFCC is one in a number of targeted attempts by a section of the nation’s security agency to gag free press. We recall the recent expulsion of Mr. Olalekan Adetayo, the State House correspondent of Punch Newspapers from Aso Rock by Bashir Abubakar, the Chief Security Officer (CSO) to President Muhammadu Buhari.”

    It added: “The alleged forfeiture order the EFCC brandished is 10 years old and a matter still before the Court of Appeal. The Guild wonders why the commission felt it had to act ahead of a case before a court of competent jurisdiction. It bears restating that such an attempt to intimidate the media does incalculable damage to the image of the EFCC and indeed the Nigerian government. Besides, it does not only undermine the foundation of our young democracy, it is a major threat to its sustenance and existence.

    “The Guild condemns the EFCC action in its entirety and calls on the commission to purge itself of all anti-democratic tendencies in order to foster mutual cooperation with the media and other stakeholders in its crusade against graft.”.

    The IPC described the invasion as a violation of the individual rights of the journalists and media workers, besides constituting an assault on press freedom.

    Director of IPC, Mr. Lanre Arogundade, in a statement, said the act was uncalled for.

    According to him, it was a twist of irony that the invasion occurred on June 12, a day traditionally associated with the vanguard role that the media played in  the struggle for democracy in Nigeria.

    Arogundade said: “The EFCC owed the nation as a whole and the media and freedom of expression community in particular, an explanation for the unwelcome raid.”

  • NPAN, editors, IPC slam EFCC raid on The Sun

    NPAN, editors, IPC slam EFCC raid on The Sun

    The Newspaper Proprietors’ Association of Nigeria (NPAN), the Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) and the International Press Centre (IPC) Lagos-Nigeria have condemned the invasion of the premises of The Sun Publishing Limited by heavily armed operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) in the early hours of Monday.

    The fierce-looking operatives prevented workers of the organisation from either entering or leaving its premises and, in the process, disrupted the circulation processes.

    In separate statements, NPAN, NGE and IPC said they received the news of the invasion with grave concern.

    NPAN President Nduka Obaigbena’s statement reads: “Facts before the NPAN indicate that the EFCC operatives swooped on the newspaper in the early morning of June 12,  while Nigerians were commemorating the historic day of free expression, and  ordered  security men to take them on a guided tour of the premises of the newspaper.

    “The EFCC operatives subsequently prevented journalists and staff from performing their constitutional duties, and abridging their rights to free speech by preventing those who were in the premises from leaving, and others reporting for duty from entering the premises.

    “Although the EFCC  said they were there to enforce a 10-year old Interim Order of Forfeiture on the shareholding of Sun Newspapers, the editors of the Sun Newspapers said the EFCC officials were there on a vengeance and intimidation mission to settle scores on several stories published by the newspaper, including the alleged ownership of certain properties by the wife of the EFCC Acting Chairman for which the Acting  Chairman had threatened libel lawsuits.

    “Instead of lawsuits,  the EFCC operatives raided the newspaper offices to revive a 10-year old  Interim Order of Forfeiture that is already before an appellate court.

    “Given these developments, it is our considered view that the EFCC, being a state institution and a creation of the law, cannot be above the law: and the manner of the invasion tends to suggest that the EFCC was out on a self-help mission, a voyage to intimidate journalists, criminalise journalism  and cower free speech.

    “We should continue to remind ourselves that this crude tactics of invasion of  media houses and harassment of journalists did not work in the past,  is not going to work now, and will never work. It is unknown to the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    “We call on the Federal Government of Nigeria and all people of reason  and goodwill to call the EFCC to order for the greater good of the Federal Republic Nigeria and the rule of law.”

    NGE President Funke Egbèmode, in a statement, said the unwarranted siege to the company subjected workers to crude intimidation, psychological and emotional trauma.

    The EFCC, she added, had accused The Sun of publishing pro-Biafra, Boko Haram and Niger Delta militant stories.

    The statement reads: “The latest action of the EFCC on a newspaper house is a sad reminder of the dark years of military dictatorship and a deliberate effort to muzzle the press.

    “As a statutory agency birthed by an Act of Parliament in a democracy, we had expected the EFCC to explore civil means of addressing perceived infraction by a critical stakeholder in the Nigerian

    democratic project.

    “Rather than see the Fourth Estate of the Realm as an opposition, the commission should realise that the media is an indispensable partner in its fight against corruption.

    “The Guild notes that the latest affront on The Sun by operatives of the EFCC is one in a number of targeted attempts by a section of the nation’s security agency to gag free press. We recall the recent expulsion of Mr. Olalekan Adetayo, the State House correspondent of Punch Newspapers from Aso Rock by Bashir Abubakar, the Chief Security Officer (CSO) to President Muhammadu Buhari.”

    It added: “The alleged forfeiture order the EFCC brandished is 10 years old and a matter still before the Court of Appeal. The Guild wonders why the commission felt it had to act ahead of a case before a court of competent jurisdiction. It bears restating that such an attempt to intimidate the media does incalculable damage to the image of the EFCC and indeed the Nigerian government. Besides, it does not only undermine the foundation of our young democracy, it is a major threat to its sustenance and existence.

    “The Guild condemns the EFCC action in its entirety and calls on the commission to purge itself of all anti-democratic tendencies in order to foster mutual cooperation with the media and other stakeholders in its crusade against graft.”.

    The IPC described the invasion as a violation of the individual rights of the journalists and media workers, besides constituting an assault on press freedom.

    Director of IPC, Mr. Lanre Arogundade, in a statement, said the act was uncalled for.

    According to him, it was a twist of irony that the invasion occurred on June 12, a day traditionally associated with the vanguard role that the media played in  the struggle for democracy in Nigeria.

    Arogundade said: “The EFCC owed the nation as a whole and the media and freedom of expression community in particular, an explanation for the unwelcome raid.”

     

     

     

     

  • Re: Arms scandal and NPAN’s moral predicament

    SIR: I really felt embarrassed by Mohammed Haruna’s assertion that ‘…after all there was nothing illegal about the compensation…’ in his defence of the newspapers that collected N10m or was it N9m from the Dasukigate sleaze, in his column titled above.

    No, Mallam Mohammed. That money given to the newspapers as compensation is allegedly a stolen property. Legally, both the giver and the receiver of such funds are guilty, if proved. By law, no amount of feigning of ignorance of the source can get the receiver off the hook. The onus lies on the newspapers to have carried out their investigation in determining the source and propriety of the funds before accepting the Greek gift. Indeed, there would not be any point in prosecuting any one involved in the Dasukigate beside Dasuki himself, if Haruna’s assertion is left unchallenged.

    The newspapers must therefore be prodded to pay back that money and later plead for leniency, not to be prosecuted.

     

    • Muhammad bn Umar,

    baayaru@gmail.com

  • Arms scandal and NPAN’s moral predicament

    Arms scandal and NPAN’s moral predicament

    These are hardly the best of times for the Nigerian media in general. For newspapers in particular the times are indeed dire. The bahaviour of some of their leading lights during last year’s election campaigns – from broadcasting blatantly malicious adverts about then opposition politicians, through publishing wrap-around adverts masquerading as news, to carrying public opinion polls of dubious integrity – left such a putrid smell in its wake that the overall integrity of the institution was bound to come under a heavy cloud.

    Last month, matters became exceptionally bad for newspapers when the association of their publishers became mired in the so-called Dasukigate scandal in which a considerable amount of funds for arms to fight Boko Haram were allegedly diverted to other purposes, notably the re-election of President Goodluck Jonathan.

    The dreadful conduct of some of the broadcast media, notably the Africa Independent Television (AIT) and the Federal Government- owned NTA, did much to damage the integrity and credibility of broadcasting. But that damage was somewhat ameliorated by the exemplary conduct of television stations like Channels that resisted the temptation of joining the ruling PDP’s gravy train.

    In contrast to the broadcasters where it was individual stations that had misbehaved, it is the parent organisation of newspapers that has now been implicated in the arms scandal.

    Predictably this has triggered much soul searching by the newspapers themselves. In an editorial by The PUNCH on December 18, headlined: “NPAN and arms scandal”, for example, the newspaper said the revelation that the President of the Newspaper Proprietors Association of Nigeria, Mr. Nduka Obaigbena, publisher of Thisday, received N120 million on behalf of its members whose newspapers were seized by the army for several days, ostensibly for security reasons, has “sent shock waves through the nation and brought NPAN into disrepute.” The action, it said, “seems to confirm the long held belief that the Nigerian media is corrupt and cosy with government functionaries. “There is the need therefore for the media to do some soul searching,” the newspaper concluded.

    Five days later, The Nation wrote in the same vein. “Speak up, NPAN”, it thundered in the headline of its editorial of December 23. “When the watchdog becomes the dog to watch,” it said, “it is a sad reflection of a dire decline in professionalism.” The newspaper said Obaigbena’s explanation for the money he received on behalf of his association was far from satisfactory, if only because it was paid through a private company, General Hydrocarbons Limited, whose only relationship with NPAN was that he apparently owned it. The NPAN’s silence in the face of messy affair, The Nation concluded, was anything “but golden.”

    The following day the NPAN broke its uneasy silence; it published a full-page advert on the pages of its member-newspapers, which sought to explain to its “Esteemed Readers” what led to the messy affair.

    The advert followed a meeting of the association attended by 19 of its most prominent members, including its two Life Patrons, Mr. Sam Amuka and Malam Isma’ila Isa, and two past presidents, Chief Segun Osoba and Mr. Ray Ekpu.  The president was conspicuous by his absence. Malam Kabiru Yusuf, Chairman, Media Trust Limited, as Deputy President, and Dame Comfort Obi, publisher of The Source, as General Secretary, signed the ensuing advert.

    According to the NPAN, the genesis of the messy affair was the impounding of bundles of newspapers of several of its members by the army right across the country between June 6 and 11, 2014 because, the army said, it had intelligence that Boko Haram was using newspaper vans to ferry bomb making materials!

    Predictably, the various newspapers affected felt outraged enough by the act itself, which cost them much revenue, and by the army’s rather rich excuse – unsurprisingly, no bomb-making material was ever found on any van – to head for the courts for redress.

    Presumably, President Goodluck Jonathan felt alarmed enough by the negative prospects for his re-election of such litigations in the run-up to last year’s general election to seek for an amicable settlement through negotiation. According to NPAN, the president met with members in Lagos on June 12, apologised for the army’s bahaviour and pleaded for a settlement out of court. The members in attendance, the association said, graciously acceded to the president’s plea.

    Accordingly, almost all the affected members submitted claims “with some”, the association said, “as low as a few hundred thousand Naira and others running into hundred (sic) of millions.” Because the divergence of the claims would have been difficult to verify, NPAN said, it accepted government’s offer of a flat compensation of N10 million per each of its 12 affected members – hence the N120 million paid to its president .Most of the members duly collected their compensation less N1 million each for its running, the association said.

    “It is unfortunate,” the association concluded, “that some people not in possession of the full facts are seeking to link the NPAN with the alleged misdeeds of those who may have received large sums of money from the office of the NSA unlawfully. Nothing can be further from the truth.”

    About a week before the said PUNCH editorial, Daily Trust had issued a statement exonerating itself from the scandal and justifying its acceptance of the N9 million it received. It said in its edition of December 12, it had no way of knowing where the money came from.

    Now that it has emerged that the compensation had come from the arms purchase vote, at least two of the members that received it have returned it. Perhaps as a result, Malam Kabiru, who co-signed the advert in question, has been under tremendous pressure from his board to return the money, not least because of Media Trust’s well advertised reputation for shunning the so-called “brown envelop” journalism much of the Nigerian media is notorious for.

    There’s an irony in Media Trust’s ethical dilemma in all this because the real genesis of then whole sordid affair was its exclusive front-page story on June 4, 2014 which exposed a huge land scandal by the army top brass. The story, clearly meant to hold public officers accountable to the people, revealed how the army shared out part of a huge piece of land in Asokoro District of Abuja meant for its barracks to top military officers, their spouses, friends and associates.

    Top of the beneficiaries was former army chief, Lt-Gen. Ihejirika, who, between himself, Gift, his wife, Oke, presumably an offspring, and an oil company, Goodok Oil and Gas, in which his family had an apparent interest, got over 15,350 square metres of land. Other big beneficiaries included former chiefs of defence staff and former and serving service chiefs who got between an average of 2,000 and 4,000 square metres each. All told there were 439 beneficiaries of what was clearly a land heist.

    Two days after that story, the army laid siege on the headquarters of Media Trust Ltd. For several days after that, going in and out of its neighborhood became a nightmare, something I personally experienced when I had occasion during the siege to visit the newspaper.

    However, even though Trust was the principal target of the army’s seizure of newspapers during the period, it was only one of three principal targets, the other two being The Nation and Leadership. All three were regarded by PDP as pro-opposition.

    It is a cruel irony that Trust’s investigative story would eventually land it in the moral predicament that it, along with other newspapers, now face over the compensation they received for the army’s untoward act mid 2014.

    As with all predicaments, there is no easy way out for the newspapers that have so far kept their compensation. For me, however, the worse option is to return it and either head back to the courts or accept the loss they suffered over the unlawful and malicious seizure of their newspapers. After all there was nothing illegal about the compensation. And even morally the predicament is more apparent than real, if only because 9 million Naira is really too little to suborn any newspaper worth the name, which all the affected newspapers are.

    The case, however, is different for the association’s president who landed them in their predicament, to begin with, by routing the compensation through his private company and who, all along, may very well have known of the source of the huge compensation he said he had received over the bombing of his newspaper, apparently by Boko Haram, given his well known closeness to the authorities.

    The NPAN owes itself an obligation to hold him responsible for the mess in which it has found itself if it wishes to convince anyone that it means to clear itself of the mess.

    There is, however, a little lesson for NPAN in all this. It said in its explanatory advert that it accepted a flat amount for all its affected members because there was no easy way to verify their divergent claims. Actually, there is a fairly simple way to do so; institute an audit bureau of circulation (ABC) for its members.

    Unfortunately, this is something the association has refused to do since the first and only one in 1987. If it is truly serious about being accountable to its “esteemed readers”, it should seize this opportunity to create one this year.

     

  • Vintage Press returns N9 million to NPAN

    Vintage Press returns N9 million to NPAN

    VINTAGE press Limited has returned the N9 million it received as compensation for the seizure of copies The Nation and SportingLife in June, 2014.

    In a statement yesterday, the organisation explained why it took the decision.

    It said: “We are again compelled to comment on the N9 million received by Vintage Press Limited as compensation from the government of ex- President Goodluck Jonathan through the Newspapers Proprietors Association of Nigeria (NPAN)   for the seizure of our publications, The Nation and SportingLife in June, 2014

     “We do this for two reasons. First, to restate the sequence of events that culminated in the payment , thereby debunking insinuations about the motive for the compensation. Second, to inform the public that the N9 million collected from  NPAN on behalf of the  Jonathan government has been returned to the association .

    “This decision was arrived at on Wednesday by the Board and Management of Vintage Press Limited after a painstaking examination of the legal and moral issues arising from the compensation

    “In our first comment published in the Saturday, December 12 edition of The Nation, we provided the background to the compensation. We recalled the mindless, illegal and unjustified seizure of thousands of copies of  both titles by soldiers in major cities and towns across the country.

    “Not only were copies of both papers impounded, our vehicles and drivers were arrested and detained in military barracks. They were released very late, in some instances at 7pm,  when it was practically impossible to put the consignments in the market.  “We know of no other newspaper that was so harassed and maltreated by soldiers who claimed that they had intelligence reports that newspapers vehicles were to be used by insurgents to ferry arms.

      “Our response to this unjustifiable infringement of our rights was go to court to  get justice and ask for Compensation. We briefed the legal firm of Femi Falana (SAN) to institute an action against the government and the military authorities and demand N300 million compensation.

    “Soon after the clampdown, Jonathan hosted the NPAN in Lagos and the issue of compensation was raised with him. He promised to get back to the association through its president, Nduka Obaigbena, the publisher of Thisday. Obaigbena later briefed members that the government had agreed to pay N10 million to each newspaper. A mail followed from the association asking newspapers to submit their statements of claims for compensation.

    “This development was discussed with our lawyer who advised that the N10 million compensation was reasonable, following which we  resolved to stay action on the suit .

     “At subsequent meetings in Lagos and Abuja , NPAN assured members that the government had not changed its mind . At the Abuja meeting in March but year, the association resolved that N1million be paid by each newspaper on receipt of the N10 million towards the acquisition of a befitting corporate office for it.

     “In May, the secretary of NPAN, Mr. Feyi Smith, brought a draft for N9 million to Vintage Press Limited.  The draft was accepted in good faith, believing it was from the account of the association and also from  the appropriate department of government.

     “Who was in a better position to deliver a draft from NPAN to Vintage Press than the NPAN secretary? Vintage Press, like other newspapers that received drafts/cheques from the NPAN, did not know that the money was paid to a private company by the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA) and from funds collected by that office specifically for the procurement of arms ?  This was until The Nation, in its edition of Friday, December 4, published details of the stupendous sums of money collected by individuals and organisations from the ONSA.

    “Now, the source of the payment to us is beyond contention.  We now know it came from the ONSA and routed through a private company, General Hydrocarbon Limited. This company is unknown to NPAN. Facts in the public domain show clearly that the money the company collected was for ‘energy consultancy.’

    That this company would collect the compensation on NPAN’s behalf was never disclosed to the association in line with corporate best practice. As a business that subscribes fully to the tenets of sound governance, we are not at ease with this revelation.

     “We are also uncomfortable with the revelation that the compensation was from the money earmarked for the purchase of arms for troops fighting insurgency.

    “This point was stated clearly in our editorial of Wednesday, December 23 in which we said: ‘it is unclear to what extent the extension of the anti- terror war was due to fraud – related factors. But it is clear enough that the war effort was deliberately hampered by fraudulent activities.”

    “It is a shame,” we said further, “that there is even a possibility, however slim, that media players helped to create an enabling environment for terrorists, wittingly or unwittingly, by linkage with Dasuki.

     “In the light of the foregoing, Vintage Press Limited, publishers of The Nation and Sportinglife, on Wednesday resolved that the N9 million compensation be returned to the NPAN for onward delivery to the source of the money. A draft for N9million was handed over to Mr Smith today in Lagos.

     “The Board and Management of Vintage Press have also resolved not to resume the legal action it asked the firm of Femi Falana (SAN) to initiate against the government and the military authorities but to regard the  losses incurred during the period as part of the sacrifice The Nation has made to the enthronement of a new order in our country.

    “It was noted with satisfaction that no law of the land was breached in asking for compensation and receiving same from the government but that with the sordid disclosures about the ONSA, Vintage Press cannot in good conscience regard the compensation as a closed case on which nothing can be done.

    “However,, we find most uncharitable the infantile claim that the compensation was meant to compromise us. We were highly critical of the Jonathan government for its incompetence as we would of any government that we judge to be incompetent. We remain committed to our mission as a newspaper and declare that no individual or body can dissuade us from this noble cause.”