Bayo Onanuga
Articles and OpinionTrending Story

OPEN LETTER TO BAYO ONANUGA

614

 

By Richard Akinnola II

My dear Bayo, I hope you are now happy and satisfied, that the National Broadcasting Commission(NBC) has sanctioned CHANNELS with a N5 million fine, following your petition over the Datti Ahmed’s interview on CHANNELS.

Chief Gani Fawehinmi and Dr Olu Onagoruwa ( both of blessed memories) were the best of friends for several years but that friendship was truncated when the latter decided to join the Abacha junta as the Attorney-General, churning out despicable Decrees. Their relationship ended and Gani publicly upbraided his erstwhile friend.

You and l have been friends for several years, fought many battles together against the military, particularly against their onslaught on the free press. I therefore feel terribly pained that l have to publicly upbraid you for your recent public statements, particularly your petition against CHANNELS tv, to the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC). Et tu, Bayo? I’m still trying to wrap my heads round your sudden 360 degrees against all you fought for under the military. You are yet to be in government and you have started exhibiting intolerance against the independent media, the same thing you fought for all your years, like Dr Onagoruwa did. I’m sure your principal, who has been a lover of free press, would be embarrassed by your position.

I watched the interview under reference and l must say, you are VERY UNFAIR to Seun Okinbaloye, the anchor man who repeatedly cautioned Datti Ahmed for making some seemingly inciting comments, to the anger and discomfiture of Datti Ahmed. So, in all conscience, what then is the basis of your petition to the NBC? Can you compare that to your recent incendiary post against an ethnic group? Why are you making enemies for your principal, instead of friends, in a country so polarized? While your principal is preaching unity and healing, you are busy trying to make more enemies for him. Yesterday, it was ARISE, today, it is CHANNELS. Is that a foretaste of what to experience in the incoming government? So, we should be fixated on NTA and TVC, isn’t that what you are trying to tell proverbially? To say that I’m totally embarrassed by your silly conduct, would be stating it mildly.

For eight years, despite all vitriolic attacks on the President, Femi Adesina, as Special Adviser, Media to the President, did not petition against any medium but “you wey never enter, don dey” censor the media. What a shame! I can expect the disaster that awaits us if you become the Presidential spokesperson.

Do l subscribe to unfettered press freedom? No. I believe every freedom comes with responsibility. However, when you create a perception that the incoming government would be intolerant of the free press, we need to sound the alarm bell.

My dear Bayo, it is often said that until a man tastes power or has access to money, you can’t judge his character. That may not be totally true because one of our mutual friends, Tunji Bello, has tasted both but has been his normal self that l have known for over three decades. His decent character has not changed, in and out of government. So, could it be that your real character is just unfolding? Just because you are now at the periphery of power, you are ready to obliterate all the values and principles you held all these years. What a shame!

TAKE NOTICE that we would fight this your planned “insurrection” against the independent media the way we, including you, fought Abacha’s dictatorship against the media.

 

Postscriptum: Before l wrote this open letter, l had informed some of our mutual friends, so that they won’t feel embarrassed.

Leave a comment

Related Articles

Is Regional Development Commissions the New Deal? by Dakuku Peterside

Before and since Nigeria gained independence, the quest for balanced regional development...

Djibouti’s Foreign Minister Elected African Union Commission’s New Chairperson

By Paul Ejime Continental leaders at their 38th ordinary summit in Addis...

The Black Sheep in ECOWAS

By Paul Ejime ECOWAS is struggling to whip its wayward member States...

Thoughts On The Opposition

Like other liberal democracies, Nigeria’s democratic system thrives on the existence of...

AI, Nigeria And Trump 2.0

The global race for artificial intelligence (AI) supremacy is swiftly redrawing the...

N10trn revenue: A perspective into NNPC Ltd’s trajectory of profitability, accountability

By Ade Faniyi The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Ltd) has...

Lessons Of The Israel-Hamas Ceasefire by Dakuku Peterside

The Israel-Palestine-Hamas conflict is one of the most enduring and complex disputes...

Telecom And The ‘Hike Economy’

The stark reality of un­avoidable price hikes has woven itself into the...

Positive Signals for Healthcare

Economic, social, and political conditions influence healthcare, a reflection of societal advancement....

Does Africa Have a January Problem? Asks Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

Fifty-seven years ago, almost to the month, celebrated Kenyan political scientist, Ali...

Baba Obasanjo and the NNPCL Refineries by Simbo Olorunfemi

That Baba Obasanjo has an almost child-like emotional attachment to the public-owned...

Right of Reply: It is about meritocracy and milestones at NNPC, By Olufemi Soneye

It is important to address the concerns raised in Farooq Kperogi’s recent...

Is the Port Harcourt Refinery now Born Again? By Simbo Olorunfemi

Miles away from Alesa-Eleme where Nigeria’s oldest Refinery is situated, one can...

Ghana on My Mind

In the heart of West Africa, where the echoes of drums narrate...

Tinubu, Abiodun, Sanwo-Olu, others extol Pastor Tunde Bakare at 70

Pastor Tunde Bakare, the founder of Citadel Global Community Church, is a...

The Minors: A Reflection of Decay in Society

By Dakuku Peterside  When voices rise in waves of protest, deeper wounds...

Dangote and the Nigeria petrol pricing crisis

By Michael Adetunji Alao There is an ongoing debate among Nigerians which...

Thoughts on Nigeria’s Food Insecurity By Dakuku Peterside

Nigeria is grappling with a multitude of significant challenges, each akin to...

Cabinet revision: Realism versus expectations

Nigeria is in the grip of a severe economic crisis, with high...

Nigeria and the scramble for Africa 2.0 By Dakuku Peterside

“Scramble for Africa” historically refers to the late 19th and early 20th...