Tag: rumour

  • FCT denies bomb blast rumour

    •NEMA, police: no explosion in Abuja 

    The Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Administration has denied the rumour of another bomb blast, said to have occurred in Abuja on Saturday evening.

    The Permanent Secretary, FCT, John Chukwu, an engineer, described the rumour as unfounded, saying there was no explosion in Abuja.

    He urged residents to be calm and go about their businesses, as the police and other security agents had combed the area without any sign of an explosion.

    The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) said yesterday that there was no bomb explosion on Saturday night in Karu, a satellite town in the Federal Capital Territory.

    The Abuja operations coordinator of NEMA, Mr. Ishaya Chonoko, in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja, said the blast heard in the area came from a quarry company, which operatedwithout the permission of the police.

    “I live in Karu, there was nothing like bomb blast in Karu; it was a quarry company that carried out that balst,” he said.

    The police command Abuja also debunked the news of the bomb explosion.

    Police spokesman Anjuguri Manzah told NAN that personnel of the command had gone round the area and found nothing like a bomb explosion.

  • Ladoja’s aide debunks rumour of assassination attempt

    An aide to the former governor of Oyo State, Sen. Rashidi Ladoja, Mr. Sunday Adeyemo had debunked the rumour going round in the media that he has relocated to United Kingdom for safety due to some assassination attempts on his life.

    Speaking with journalist in Ibadan, Adeyemo said he was surprised when he received different phone calls from all parts of the country that he has relocated to United Kingdom for safety.

    In his words “I have not relocated to United Kingdom. I am in Nigeria with members of my family enjoying ourselves. I move around the country freely without anybody or group of people threatening me”.

    Adeyemo further disclosed that he has not travelled out of the country in the last five months and there had never been a single reported case of assassination attempt on his life.

    He further stated that the rumour that is being speculated in the media has a political undertone, urging members of the public to disregard such informed that he has relocated from Nigeria to United Kingdom.

    He also maintained that he has a good working relationship with his boss Senator Rashidi Ladoja saying that he is a worthy ambassador of the state.

    He also enjoined members of the press to shun sensational journalism and embrace professionalism by confirming the authenticity of their report before going to press.

  • Ladoja debunks rumour of assassination

    Ladoja debunks rumour of assassination

    Former Oyo State governor, Senator Rashidi Ladoja, yesterday denied reports of his relocation to United Kingdom following assassination attempt on his life.

    Speaking with journalists in Ibadan, Ladoja’s  media aide, Sunday Adeyemo, described the report as untrue.

    He said that Ladoja had been inundated with phone calls from several well-wishers, supporters and associates from different parts of the country as a result the rumour of purported assassination attempt and his subsequent relocation to UK for safety.

    He said “He (Ladoja) has not relocated to UK. He is Nigeria with members of

    his family and is hale and hearty. He is been moving round the country freely without anyone threatening him.

    “Senator Ladoja has not travelled out of the country

    in the last five months and there had never been a single reported

    case of assassination attempt on his life. The report has a political undertone and it should be discountenance by the public.”

    He admonished journalists to shun sensationalism and embrace professionalism by confirming stories before going to press.

  • How distance, rumour almost ruined our courtship

    How distance, rumour almost ruined our courtship

    It was a thanksgiving service for their marriage at the Redeemed Christian Church of God, House of Bread Chapel, Nsukka Street Port Harcourt, Rivers State. For Mr and Mrs Ezekiel and Eunice Ajayi, the event was not just the celebration of their love, it was a victory over distance and meddlesome friends who tried to torpedo the ship of their union.

    The groom works with The Nation’s Port Harcourt station and his bride lives in Ondo.

    Speaking after the service, Mrs. Ajayi described distance as a barrier to any love relationship, adding that it could be managed through prayers and effective communication.

    She said although the aches and agony of being without her love lingered, it was no longer important because she won the battle through prayer, adding that she had forgotten the grudges she encountered during the courtship.

    Mrs Ajayi said: “I met my husband in my village Okemesi, Ekiti State.  We attended the same school in the same community.  But after few years he got a job and travelled out of the community and we lost contacts. Thank God for Facebook,   it was when I was doing my National Youths Service (NYSC) in Taraba State that we re-connected again and exchanged phone numbers.”

    However, she said she almost bowed to challenges encountered during the courtship, noting that as in most distance relationship, suspicion was a dominant factor but was conquered through love, constant reconciliation and effective communication.

    “When your partner is far from you, the relationship must face challenges, because there will always be suspicious. How the two partners handle their crisis also matters; are they ready for reconciliation each time there is problem?

    “There was a time my husband called me and said he was in Ondo State but I later found out that he was in Port Harcourt. I was very angry because I had already called my friends and parents that he was around only to find out that he was in Port Harcourt.

    “In long distance relationship you don’t always see your partner when you want him/her – that is another problem. And as a lady who is love with a man who wants to be your husband, you need him always by your side.

    “Then you can imagine finding yourself in such condition and suddenly you receive a call that your man is not faithful to you. Now, how do you know that the caller is sincere? In such a situation one is supposed to meet the partner to hear him out because phone conversation cannot be enough to solve the problem. I have heard people saying that distance courtship doesn’t work but mine worked through effective prayer and communication.”

    “There was another issue when I had accident; this time around it was between me and my best friend. She took the advantage of the accident to lure my husband into relationship. It was a big challenge that wanted to end our relationship if my husband didn’t love me. She told my husband all sorts of things about me. In fact, she wanted my husband and had advised him to dump me even when I was hospitalised.

    “At a point when the strange lady started calling my husband daily, I became angry and this was happening few months to our wedding. Then, I told my parents that despite all we had spent for the wedding that I was going to back out.

    “The funny thing is that she will tell my husband another thing and call to tell me the sweet things my husband told her. But I started praying to God asking Him to take control of everything and I am happy today to tell you that God is faithful.”

  • PDP: Mu’azu’s resignation a rumour

    PDP: Mu’azu’s resignation a rumour

    THE Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has described the purported resignation of its National Chairman, Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu as rumour.

    The party urged its members and supporters to disregard the alleged resignation.

    In a statement yesterday, the PDP’s National Publicity Secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh, thanked party members and supporters that showed concerns over Mu’azu’s purported resignation.

    The party urged members to remain focused on the campaigns and not to be distracted, adding that such developments were not unusual, especially in an election year.

    The PDP said its campaign was on course, insisting that the party would win the 2015 general elections, following the soaring “nationwide acceptability” of President Goodluck Jonathan and other candidates of the party ahead of the polls”.

  • Rumour mill and the NYSC fee

    Nigerians are a funny lot. Oh, do I even say we are funny? I think we are simply unique. We always claim we are enlightened, yet we don’t seem to put that into use when dealing with certain social and political issues. Is there any country where rumour mongering thrives the way it does in Nigeria? I seriously doubt. At times, when you see an educated person discussing an issue that he does not have facts and figures on, simply ask him a simple question: have you tried to find out the true position of things? He is likely to shrug his shoulders and tell you that everyone, including himself, is discussing it.

    For many, this is likely to be the case with the ‘raging’ controversy surrounding the decision by the management of the National Youth Service Corps, NYSC, to ask prospective corps members to buy a scratch card with which to download their call-up letters online. NYSC, acording to the rumour mill,  asked them to pay N4000 before they could collect their call-up letters; in other words,  pay N4000 to serve their country. At least, that is the version of the story that the rumour mill was feeding members of the public. Do I say that your truly was also sucked in by the story? Yeah, I was. But I just decided to go a step further. Why should a body like the NYSC charge prospective corps members such amount of money all because they wanted to get their call-up letters? But wait a minute, do most Nigerians double-check before going to town over an issue?

    These are the things I was able to find out concerning the call-up letter imbroglio. The most significant is that NYSC gave options – in fact, two options. A prospective corps member can buy scratch card and go online and do all the things he or she needs to do so that he or she already has his or her table ready before getting to the camp. This option includes doing registration online (which usually takes at least 36 hours in the camp upon reporting) and then downloading the call-up letter and even the biometrics would have been done online. The other option is that the prospective corps member goes to her school where he or she has just finished, and then picks up his or her call-up letter by hand and then proceeds to the state where he or she has been posted to. If I am not making a mistake here, I think this is very straightforward and the choice, if again I am correct, is that of the prospective corps member: you can either raise the N4000 and then proceed to the cyber café beside your house and do everything online or go to your school and pick up your call-up letter and proceed to your orientation camp.

    Does the NYSC have some fault here? Yes, it surely does. And that fault stems from the fact that not enough information and communication were provided as far as this novel idea is concerned. People resist change and that is natural. But that change becomes doubly challenging when it comes with parting with your hard-earned money. Clearly, the idea of asking people to pay to collect their call-up letters will surely raise eyebrows, mainly because it represents a departure from the norm. Most of us who did that mandatory one-year national youth service are aware that we just went to the universities and polytechnics where we finished and picked up our call-up letters. And may I also say that it was easier then. No insecurity like this and one could sleep even by the roadside, if stranded, with both eyes closed. If you were to fear anything, perhaps it had to be natural elements.

    However, I think we need to look at the issue from what we call opportunity cost and alternative foregone in elementary economics. If convenience and safety are the names of the game, which option will someone who finished from, say the University of Benin, but who resides in Lagos, pick? Brave the elements, square up with the inherent dangers and hit the Benin-Ore expressway to go and pick his or her call up letter or just raise N4000 and buy the scratch card? In fact, if this option of a scratch card was available when I was to go for my orientation camp at the Black Gold Orientation Camp, Kaduna, some 18 years ago, I would have grabbed it with both hands. I finished from the then Ondo State University, Ado-Ekiti and I came to Lagos immediately after finishing with my clearance. When the NYSC call-up letter came, I had to hit the road to Ado-Ekiti where I picked up the letter. I then came back to Lagos again before proceeding to Kaduna. You can imagine the stress!

    I have deliberately brought up these options and my own personal experience to let Nigerians know that at times, we do not look at the larger picture when we are passing judgment. This is by no means a case of trying to help NYSC plead its case. I want to believe the body has enough hands in its public affairs department to tackle the issue. But this write-up aims to deal with two issues simultaneously. And those issues are the fact that Nigerians should always get their facts right before condemning any policy by any government agency. Can government be trusted in this part of the world? I seriously doubt that. In fact, going by the unsavoury experience of the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS) recruitment fiasco, every Nigerian has all the reasons in the world to be circumspect when asked by government agency to pay for any service.

    In this regard, I can understand the indifference. But indifference is again quite different from deliberately consuming misinformation when technology has made life less miserable for us when it comes to information gathering and verification. It is high time we collectively dried up the oil that keeps the rumour mill running in our society. Again, I am not deluding myself that the handlers of the rumour mill would not have another issue to feast on tomorrow whenever they consider the NYSC N4000 controversy too stale to keep on the front burner. They will surely have. And in most cases, it has to do with one government decision or the other. That is the nature of the society we live in. But we can change it.

    And in ending this, I still go back to the main issue: the NYSC N4000 call-up letter ‘fee’. As earlier stated, the issue here is that of commonsense: will you spend N4000 and get your call-up letter within the confines of your sitting room (if you have internet connection in your house) or go to your university and pick it? It is a choice that is purely that of the person involved. The key issue here, as I have found out, is that NYSC is not forcing any prospective NYSC member to buy into that option and that is the main reason why the controversy surrounding the issue is needless.

     

    • Adefeso writes from Lagos
  • Anxiety over rumour of Ebola outbreak

    Anxiety over rumour of Ebola outbreak

    Last week, there was a major scare over the outbreak of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) in Abuja when a woman was alleged to have died of the virus at the Asokoro General Hospital. GBENGA OMOKHUNU reports.

    There have been speculations about the possibility of a case of Ebola virus disease in Abuja. Sources say the suspected carrier attended a conference at the NICON Luxury Hotel and must have had contacts with other people. Residents of Abuja experienced another Ebola scare, aside the earlier one which featured the unfortunate viral messages that prescribed bathing with and drinking of salt water as preventive measures.

    Health authorities had also educated people on the Ebola virus; informing them about the possibility of surviving the disease. People have  also  been encouraged to improve the level of personal hygiene and avoid unnecessary body contacts with people.

    The current wave of scare started when activities in the Utako District of Abuja were paralysed over an alleged Ebola victim. The incident took place at a junction along Ekukinam Street beside Alibro Atrium, close to ABC Transport Park, where a middle-aged man suddenly slumped while walking along the road.

    The man was reportedly vomiting and sweating profusely. The incident scared people who immediately speculated that he was probably an Ebola victim. Nobody went to his aid for the fear of Ebola.

    But less than three weeks after a suspected Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) patient died in a private hospital in Abuja, the scare about the virus in an Asokoro General Hospital began.

    The incident which caused grave panic in the territory is yet to abate as officials of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Health Secretariat are still making efforts to enlighten the public properly.

    When contacted for comment on the issue, the spokesperson of the FCT Health Secretariat, Badaru Salisu Yakasai, in a statement said the results of the test are yet to either confirm or refute claims that the patient died of the Ebola Virus Disease.

    He said: “The Family Medicine Unit of Asokoro District Hospital suspected Ebola disease in a patient on admission at the Accident and Emergency Unit on August 28 and immediately isolated the patient. Strict infection control measures were immediately taken.

    “Blood sample was then taken to the designated FCT Ebola testing laboratory which is within the hospital premises. The Epidemiology Unit of Public Health Department of the Health and Human Services Secretariat was notified and their response was immediate.

    “The results of the Ebola testing were being expected from the laboratory. Members of staff of the hospital who came in contact with the deceased were then placed under strict surveillance, pending when the test results will be out.

    “The case also served as a drill to test the preparedness of the hospital to manage and contain Ebola disease. Clinical assessment, however, did not reveal any history of contact or travel.

    “However, in view of the high index of suspicion, isolation and strict infection control measures were continued and the unit was condoned off. Unfortunately, the patient died the next day, Friday, August 29.

    ”The Accident and Emergency Unit was temporarily relocated to the General Outpatient Unit (GOPD). A list of all medical staff that had contact with the patient has been compiled and they are all under surveillance.

    “The general public is advised not to panic as a case of Ebola has not been confirmed at the hospital and the measures that have been put in place are only precautionary in the interest of public safety.”

    Minister of Health, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu immediately refuted the claim after tests had been carried out on the dead person. He confirmed that she did not die as a result of the Ebola virus, adding that there was no Ebola outbreak in Abuja.

    Despite this clarification, some are still convinced that the patient died as a result of the Ebola virus while others are living in fear.

    Many residents spoke to our correspondent about their reactions on the speculation.

    A businessman, Mr. Shola Odumosun said: “When I had about it, I had to disregard it. Being an enlightened person, one of the things I have discovered since the spread of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) outbreak in Nigeria is that apprehension and unnecessary fear kills faster than the virus itself. There is the need for people to be properly enlightened about the sad development.

    “As far as the Ministry of Health is concerned, I am quite convinced that for now there is no Ebola outbreak in Abuja. But you know people around me started being panicky and were even calling their loved ones to stay away from the Asokoro General Hospital.

    “I watched a video about a man running from Ebola and a lady around there had to jump into a well. This means that she had even sentenced herself to death before death itself would come. People should take their time to ascertain the truth or otherwise of every rumour they heard. If care is not taken, it may affect both our private and public health sectors so much so that those who are supposed to receive emergency attention for a particular sickness far from Ebola will end up being quarantined unnecessarily.

    “These days, many are dying due to the fear that they are carriers of EVD. That you have Ebola is even not an automatic death sentence. There are measures to be taken in Lagos and other places where some people that were quarantined initially were freed.

    “I haven’t called any member of my family in Abuja because I know it was a rumour.”

    Another resident, Adelani Adepegba said: “The news which turned out to be a rumour really scared me. I immediately concluded that it meant that the EVD is already in Abuja. I asked members of my family and friends to take note and avoid the hospital.

    “The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory and the chairmen of the area councils need to do more as regards enlightenment campaigns. We cannot afford to experience EVD in Abuja; it will be more disastrous being the seat of power. I was worried but thank God it was a rumour. People should be more particular about personal hygiene.”

    A civil servant, Mr. Paul Oba said he had vowed not to visit the hospital for now. “I was sad when I heard of the EVD case in the hospital. I quickly alerted members of my church who use it . I then vowed not to visit the hospital. But we thank God that it was a rumour.”

    On her part, Mary Obioma said: “I use the hospital frequently before the rumour, but now I am  afraid of visiting that hospital. Prevention, they say, is better than cure. When I heard the news, I was shocked because I was at the Asokoro Hospital on that day.

    “Government should make public happenings in our hospitals to avoid the spread of the EVD. Who knows if some people have been affected and are afraid of coming out in public to be cured or quarantined? They may be afraid of stigmatisation.

    “They should also know that they are doing more harm to members of their family, their neighbourhood and the entire country. My prayer is that the EVD should not go beyond the present stage in Nigeria.”

  • Funding our military

    Funding our military

    At the height of the pro-democracy protests over the annulment of June 12, 1993 presidential election, the rumour mill was very active churning out one story after another, feasting on the mood of the populace.

    In the camp of those opposed to the cancellation of the poll, it was generally believed that the United States and other western allies were going to send troops and equipment to help topple the Abacha government and restore the winner of that election, Bashorun MKO Abiola. It never happened.

    Such was the belief among pro-democracy activists and their supporters that the Americans were going to put boots on the ground and chase away Abacha. They were utterly gutted and felt let down by the US when at the end of the day, Washington sent neither soldiers nor equipment and Abiola died in detention without actualising his mandate.

    You can imagine the skepticism when the rumour mill came alive again in the aftermath of the abduction of over 200 Nigerian school girls in Chibok, Borno State, over a month ago by Boko Haram insurgents that America was going to help Nigeria militarily to find the girls. Once beaten twice shy? But this time around the Yankees are living up to expectation.

    And you need to see how relieved many were last week when after several weeks of expectation, President Barack Obama finally approved the deployment of 80 US servicemen and equipment to join many international well wishers collaborating with the Nigerian military to find and bring back our girls.

    The relief was however dampened in some quarters when it emerged that the US Air Force personnel and equipment would be based in Chad, Nigeria’s northern neighbour and not on Nigerian soil. The arrival of the American surveillance aircraft and personnel came in the wake of a similar deployment by the United Kingdom of its state-of the-art surveillance aeroplane-The Sentinel- to Accra, Ghana to also help Nigeria in the search for the Chibok girls. Many view the stationing of these two aircraft and the accompanying personnel outside the shores of Nigeria as a sign of lack of confidence in the Nigerian military by America and Britain.

    In the fight against Al Qaeda in Afghanistan, the US military not only operated from neigbhouring Pakistan, but has substantial men and equipment on ground in Afghanistan to fight the terrorists. What are the Americans afraid of in Nigeria?  In order to be seen as patriotic, one could argue that only the Americans can say why they chose Chad over Nigeria in that troop deployment and that our military is up there among the very best in the league of medium powers. ‘We have the capacity to host and collaborate with the US military or any other superpower military in this rescue mission’, one could blindly argue, but regrettably this doesn’t seem to be the case.

    And in a tacit endorsement of the position of the skeptics on the operational readiness and competence of the Nigerian armed forces to fight the war on terror, the Nigerian Army last week cried out over the poor funding of our military, especially the army. The slightly over N4 billion annual budgetary allocations to the army, the service say is grossly inadequate to equip the troops, not to talk of training and other needs of the modern soldier. The army high command is calling on government to look at other sources of funding and equipping our military to meet with the changing times and security challenges.

    Before the Americans open snub of our military in their troop deployment, not a few have expressed serious doubt in the ability and capability of our armed forces to effectively fight, contain and defeat the Boko Haram insurgency. And their position is strengthened so to speak by the ease at which Boko Haram strikes and spreads terror in the land with little or no response from the Nigerian military and other security forces.

    If Boko Haram could strike at a military base in the north east, a supposedly secure location, and several months after the perpetrators have not been brought to book, why should the Americans or any other serious military for that matter trust our military base to secure their men and equipment? Why would any other military want to use our military base when our ‘boys’ in the theatre of the insurgency and heart of a military base, could rebel and fire at their commander in frustration and protest?

    I am not an expert in military or security matters and I don’t have to be one to know that common sense dictates that a man who is not safe or secure in his house cannot guarantee the safety of his visitor. The Nigerian military as it stands today cannot offer that guarantee to any other armed forces on our soil. It is as simple as that: let the truth be told.

    Why are we in this mess or how did we get into this mess that we cannot even provide safety for someone who wants to help us? Simple! Years of neglect and corruption. Self-centredness and wickedness on the part of our successive leaders, have almost reduced the Nigerian Armed Forces, once the pride of Africa, to a band of Boys Brigade. And the military has a hand in the systematic destruction of this once national institution and pride. The soldiers have spent more years at the helm in this country than the civilians and each left the military worse than it met it. Why? Greed!

    It is easier to blame President Goodluck Jonathan and the present leadership of the Nigerian armed forces for the sorry state of our military today and the failure of our soldiers to effectively defend the nation’s territorial integrity, but the rot did not start with them. It goes way back.

    The only blame Jonathan would have as commander-in-chief is if he leaves the military as it is by the time he is leaves office and thus expose our nation to more danger. He should heed the call of the army for improved funding of the military and galvanise the private sector to engage in the local production of what I would call ‘below the belt’ military equipment (uniform, beret, helmet, boots, small arms et al, for now) to conserve foreign exchange for the importation of real military hardware that can stand us in good stead in the 21st century warfare. After all the primary duty of a commander-in-chief is the protection of the territorial integrity of his nation.

    This is a call to arm, President Jonathan; before you go let’s have a robust and effective fighting machine called the Nigerian Armed Forces; the ones that can defend us and we’ll be proud of. As your administration winds down, I am afraid the time is short, but you can do a lot by setting the ball rolling. You can do it if you want to and if you fail to do it, Nigerians will never forgive you.

     

  • Rector clarifies hike rumour

    There is no fees hike at the Rufus Giwa Polytechnic, Owo (RUGIPO), the Rector, Prof Igbekele Ajibefun, has said. He said the management only increased the cost of some services for freshers.

    Ajibefun cleared the air on the fees hike controversy while responding to our correspondent’s question in an online interview. He said: “The fee for all categories of students remains the same, but costs of some services for fresh students have gone up.”

    He said students would have to pay for identity cards, internet band for e-registration, among others, adding that nobody should expect the costs of the service to remain the same.

    Ajibefun said the increment affected only freshers, confirming that the action was not unilateral, but was duly deliberated on and approved by the Governing Council of the institution in one of its sittings.

    The management announced the new fee last December. With the new fee regime, ND students of Ondo State origin studying Social Sciences courses will pay N48,500. Science students pay N51,500 as against less than N30,000, which they were initially paying. Non-indigene students taking Science courses will pay N61,500 while their Social Science counterparts will pay N58,500.

    HND students of Ondo State origin studying Science courses will pay N63,500. Their Social Science counterparts pay N55,500. Non-indigene HND students pay N75,500 to study Science courses. Their colleagues in Social Science pay N68,500.

    The acceptance fee, which was initially fixed at N7,500, is now N15,000. Part-time students are not exempted from the hike.

    Students of the institution have berated the management for the hike. Some returning students, who spoke to CAMPUSLIFE, described the hike as a new height of insensitivity by the management.

    They said the hike was a deliberate attempt to make life unbearable for them, adding that it may force many students to drop out of school. Freshers, who are directly affected by the hike, said, though they were happy to have been offered admission, the hike in fee was giving them worries.

     

  • Beware, rumour monger

    Beware, rumour monger

    Even if he does not carry out his threat to move the Baleysa State Assembly to pass a law criminalising rumour mongering, Governor Seriake Dickson has secured an eminent place in the Nigerian press in general and the sociology of the media in particular with a locution that is sure to go down as a seminal breakthrough in the taxonomy of news.

    He called it “dem say dem say” journalism.

    Unlike “hard news” and soft news” and “cocktail journalism” and even “junk news” (one person’s “junk” is another person’s treasure), the term leaves no room for ambiguity. Its meaning is clear, self-evident even. It is easy on the tongue, and has a rhythm, a cadence that is easy on the ears.

    Above all, it has the great merit of being uniquely Nigerian. They are welcome to their radio trottoir (radio of the verandah) in Cameroun, where the natives are trapped in the Francophile/ Anglophile divide. Thankfully, we suffer no such encumbrance here.

    Now, some context.

    To the consternation of the authorities, a wave of rumours, compounded by an avalanche of propaganda, has been sweeping Balyesa in recent weeks, sponsored no doubt by people who, even without Dickson saying so, do not mean well for Bayelsa.

    Indeed, Dickson could have added that the rumour mongers and propagandists also do not mean well for Nigeria. If they did, they would not be peddling their pernicious wares in President Goodluck Jonathan’s home state – his backyard, to put the matter bluntly — without fear and without remorse. The question cries out to be asked: Is nothing sacred to them?

    Surely, no responsible government can allow that kind of thing – “dem say, dem say” journalism, to call it by his evocative coinage — to go on unchecked. Accordingly, he has put practitioners of that mode of communication on notice that they will henceforth be made to pay for their temerity, be they reporters, bloggers, or just plain talebearers.

    This time, they will not be able to take refuge behind the usual shibboleths of “freedom of speech” and “human rights” and all that. And they can expect no aid or comfort from one of the usual sources, the United Kingdom. For the UK Government has felt obliged, in the face of the kind thing that has been going on in Bayelsa, to take measures to rein in the press.

    It is not clear whether Governor Dickson was influenced by developments in the UK media, but he inaugurated last week a high-powered committee to tackle what he called “the pervading feeling of negativity” in the state, despite all the good things that have been happening there and the wonders Balyesans have been working at home and in Abuja.

    “That is not right and must therefore be checked,” he told members of the committee on rumour-mongering, aforementioned, comprising ranking public servants, representatives of the clergy, traditional rulers, market women, and for good measure, an official each from the State Security Service and the police

    To curb the tide of negativity in the state, Dickson will employ a two-pronged approach. The first, a campaign of mass education and enlightenment on the programs and policies of the Dickson Administration, belongs in the remit of the special committee. The goal is to promote value-orientation and good governance (ha!), and the Committee will work closely with other agencies of government to achieve that goal.

    This approach is rooted in Dickson’s firm belief that underdevelopment, lack of education, and a decline in public ethics, are chiefly responsible for the propaganda and the avalanche of rumours that could overrun the state if not tackled firmly and decisively.

    In addition, the Committee will serve as a “clearing house” for members of the public to settle their doubts on issues concerning the government and the state. The government will provide “dedicated hotlines” through which members of the public can seek and receive clarification on the issues of the day and thus avoid engaging in” unnecessary speculation.”

    In this vexing matter, Dickson could have relied on the proposition settled centuries ago that ignorance of the law or of process to prescribe summary punishment for the rumour mongers and propagandists who are roiling Bayelsa. But, committed democrat that he is, he has gone out of his way to create an atmosphere in which no residents can claim that they had no reason to doubt what they heard or read.

    The crucial test is: Did they avail themselves of the opportunities provided for the public to ascertain the veracity of what they heard or read? Does the material at issue come stamped with the imprimatur, the nihil obstat of the Committee?

    The second tack of Dickson’s campaign has as its anchor a bill he is presenting to the Balyelsa Assembly for urgent enactment into a law providing stiff penalties for propaganda and rumour mongering.

    Hear it from the Governor himself:

    “Going forward, we hope to sponsor a legislation that will provide punishment for false dissemination of information and propaganda, either against the reputation of private individuals or about government or its officials.

    “Of course, we are all aware that the existing laws provide for offences such as criminal defamation of character and so on. But we are going to come up with a legislation to punish ‘dem say, dem say’ people.”

    So, there you have it, all ye practitioners of “dem say, dem say” journalism and all ye merchants of rumour and peddlers of propaganda, whether you are plying your trade on old media or new media.

    Some people are already drawing dark parallels between the proposed law and the 1964 Newspaper (Amendment Act),and its precursor, the Eastern Nigeria Newspaper Law of 1957; Decree 11 of 1975 (the so-called Ohonbamu Decree promulgated by General Murtala Muhammed, Decree Four, which has continued to define General Muhammadu Buhari’s regime, and of course, section 59 of the Criminal Code.

    Easy, gentlemen; easy. As the Bayelsan authorities have explained, journalists who adhere to the ethics and best practices of the profession, and those who stick only to what has been officially certified to be safe for public consumption have nothing to fear.

    It is worth remarking that the proposed law is already curbing rumour and propaganda even before its enactment. Nobody seems willing to talk about the nature and content of the rumour and propaganda that led the authorities to move so resolutely against a plague that was about to consume the state.

    All I could find out — in the strictest confidence, I should stress – is that there had been some murmurs about a ghost super-permanent secretary drawing a hefty salary and enjoying bountiful perks into the bargain and wielding enormous extra-ministerial power through remote control

    Apparently, there had also been some whispers, barely audible, about one small town in the state that has been piled and continues to be piled with far more federal munificence that it can absorb – the latest being N6 billion on a church and a “youth centre” — as if there is no other town in Bayelsa worth developing.

    Plus tales from the oil industry, the parallel one that does not figure in the national accounts: the major player, the surrogates, and the beneficiaries, names not withheld.

    Who then can in good conscience blame Governor Dickson for moving so resolutely against such negativity?

    Inside sources tell me that Aso Rock, an even bigger casualty of negativity, considers Bayelsa’s Anti-rumour Committee an attractive model and will be studying its proceedings carefully.