Tunde Thompson
‘I’ve forgiven Buhari, Lets rally round and support him’ says Tunde Thompson, journalist jailed under Decree 4
BY OLAKUNLE OLAFIOYE
Just like in his previous outings, the ghost of Decree 4 of 1984 is
haunting General Muhammadu Buhari(rtd), presidential candidate of the
All Progressives Congress (APC), as he once again takes another shot at
the presidency. The infamous decree which made the duo of Tunde Thompson
and Nduka Irabor of The Guardian newspaper the first victims of
military law, has in recent weeks gained currency with political rivals
using it as a weapon against the former military head of state.
But Tunde Thompson believes Buhari’s opponents are deliberately
confusing and misleading Nigerians . In this interview, he lays bare
the issues surrounding their detention as well as unmasked those behind
their ordeal.
Excerpts:
Who is Tunde Thompson?
I am a journalist and I’ve been a journalist since 1971 when I joined
the Daily Times as a trainee sub-editor. I was there till 1972 when I
left for the University of Ibadan to read Political Science. I was in UI
till 1975 but during my vacations I worked with Daily Times and I
didn’t need to apply. Daily Times was at its apogee then. By 1975 when I
tried to return, Daily Times had deteriorated and I couldn’t even find
my way back. Tony Momoh, who was the editor, confided in me that he
couldn’t employ me directly, that my application had to go through the
board and all that.
So, in the end, I went back just to say hello and then I was with Dr.
Olu Onagoruwa who said to me “Somebody was asking to see you and Felix
Adenaike called from Ibadan saying Jemibewon had given himself and Tola
Adeniyi a job , to run Daily Sketch and that I was needed. He said
Felix told him that they had been looking for me all over the place”,
but I was in Calabar for my youth service between 1975 and 1976. That he
said “Wherever I was, they were ready to increase my pay.”
So, I became the features editor and later political editor at the
Daily Sketch. I was there till the 80s or so when Daily Times improved a
little and I went back to the Editorial Board as a senior lead writer
but for a short while as the firm became worse by 1983 and many of us
had to leave. That was when The Guardian started and I joined The
Guardian later when it become a daily newspaper as a senior diplomatic
correspondent. That was what I was doing before I ran into trouble.
How did your trouble start?
It all started when I became deeply interested in the people at the
Ministry of External Affairs who had been retired. Some people came to
me and said they had retired so and so person. Even some of the affected
diplomats complained to me as the senior diplomatic correspondent. My
child was ill at that time, so I was away for some time, but
subsequently, I discovered that embassies and consulates had been
closed down and all that, so, I wrote about it.
The authorities came for me when I wrote an Op-ed in The Guardian
entitled, ‘The Mysteries of External Affairs.’ I questioned why people
who had been doing a great job suddenly lost their jobs in so short a
time. I went to Nigeria’s mission in Lebanon, as they said Nigeria
should re-open its mission in Lebanon. Then I told them government had
the right to close down any mission if it was not generating returns. I
was defending my country, but I was seen as a security threat. So, that
was the beginning of the fire. When the report was out, security people
came, asking for the writer of the story. It was an Op-ed page and it
was obvious that the name of the writer would be there. When the paper
told them that we stood by our story they retreated, but by the time I
wrote about some ambassadors being retired and military officers sent
to diplomatic missions there was trouble.
Was it a joint effort between you and Irabor ?
No it wasn’t. My grandmother died in Edo State and I had to attend the
burial. So, I gave him my manuscript, being an assistant news editor.
When I was in Benin that Sunday, I sent for the paper and when I saw the
report I shouted. I knew something had gone wrong because somebody I
did not talk to was quoted in the story. So, on February 11, 1984
somebody from Nigeria Security Organisation, NSO, Awolowo Road, came to
pick me up at The Guardian premises and the receptionist said to me
“your friend from Ibadan wants to see you .” To cut the story short, he
insisted that I should follow him. I went to the editor and the legal
adviser and they asked me to comply. At the end of the day, I ended up
at Ikoyi, Off Awolowo Road and that was the beginning of a hell of
experience.
What did NSO ask you?
They came on a Friday knowing that weekend was the best time to subject
you to an ordeal with mosquitoes since nobody could bail you on a
weekend. They didn’t question me till the following Monday. We were kept
in 10 x 10 room and we were about 10 . If you wanted to pee, they told
you to knock from inside and they would open from outside. During
questioning, they wanted to know who told me what I wrote. As I was
writing they told me I had to tell them who told me this and that point.
That was the problem.
Even at the point of death, a journalist is not expected to disclose
his source. I told them I wouldn’t oblige them adding if I wrote
something they liked, they should applaud me but conversely they could
send a rejoinder and I would publish it. Another questioning session
took place about two days later and they took me to the head of security
at that time, Alhaji Rafindadi. He it was, who really asked me who told
me what I wrote. I told him he was a security man and if I told him
that a man in my neigbourhood does not go to work, that he’s at home
from morning till about 9pm or 10pm and by 10 pm he’s gone and by 6am he
is back and he lives big. You investigated and discovered him to be
the kingpin of the underworld. Would he disclose his source? We are
supposed to obey the same rules about professional ethics. If you won’t
tell him why should you expect me to tell you who told me what I wrote?
As I told your men, if you like what we write, clap for us but if you
don’t, send a rejoinder we will publish it. That was the beginning of
it. So, what led to another person being called was when the man asked
me about another story that was written and that had been embellished. I
don’t mean embellishment in an offensive way but I think the person
that did it was doing his job, by adding additional paragraphs as an
assistant editor and that was the source of the problem. So, I had to
confess that I did not work on the story alone that they would need to
call him to confirm or verify what happened.
Was that when they went for Irabor?
Yes, something happened after I said that. They decided to go for him
and they went for him at a very interesting time. It was the day
Offodile promulgated Decree 4 of 1984, The Protection of Public
Officers against False Accusations Decree at a world press conference.
Incidentally, Nduka Irabor was coming from that conference with the
report when they arrested him and brought him to Ikoyi. He became the
second victim of the decree.
You must have been detained under Decree 2 ….(cuts in)
There was no Decree No.4 at the time we committed the so-called offence
and there was no basis for prosecuting us. They could have watched
developments and see who would be caught because the “offences” for
which we were prosecuted was committed before the decree.
That means they made the decree retroactive?
But that is unacceptable professionally. They made it retroactive and
nobody called them to order. Instead there were theatrics in court that
if you see a secretary having sex with a Permanent Secretary and a
journalist wrote about it, would you arrest the journalist? That was
irrelevant to me. But the strategy adopted by The Guardian in court was
that we won’t even say a word. So, Nduka and myself did not utter a word
because if we uttered a word they could ask us who told us what we said
and then if we failed to name our source(s), it would mean that we were
subverting the process, that we were trying to sabotage government’s
efforts at getting the truth. But you don’t get the truth by forcing
people to divulge who told them what they were told. I think that is
where the problem arose. What I find interesting now is that people are
still talking about this Decree 4 like somebody wanting to know what I
felt.
For how long were you in detention before you were taken to court?
Policemen can be very good. They know when there is truth on the side of
their master and on the side of the accused. What happened was that I
told them to put me on the corridor when Nduka was coming in so that I
could alert him about what questions I was being asked. They put me on
the corridor and I whispered to him that they had been asking me about
foreign missions that had been closed down and then about those that had
been appointed as ambassadors or high commissioners and they wanted to
know who told me but I refused to tell them. At that point, somebody
saw us and raised the alarm that we were talking and I replied that we
were not talking but only greeting each other. So, they took Nduka away
immediately to another detention room and I was taken back to where I
was with about eight to ten others with the air-conditioner making noise
to disturb my sleep and mosquitoes viciously attacking us . By the
following day or two days after he was taken in for questioning and he
was already alerted. We later met when they said they were arranging for
us to meet lawyers from Rotimi Williams chambers.
For how long were you there before you were taken to court?
From February 11 when I was arrested and within a week or two, Nduka
came in and then we were there till May when the trial started and up
till July 4.
Were you granted bail?
For where? We were moved in a very dramatic away from Awolowo Road, to
the Maximum Security Prisons at Kirikiri . They moved both of us into a
cell meant for those awaiting trial . At that time we discovered those
who were awaiting trial were even more than prisoners. There were so
many of us and some could not have their bath for days. So, they
depended on us for food, soap and all that.
Can you recall your day in court?
That was a very dramatic day I can’t forget. We were whisked out of the
premises of the Kirikiri Maximum Security Prisons between 7am and 7.30
am . Imagine going from Kirikiri to Ikoyi in Lagos Island ? Consider
the distance then with all the traffic one had to contend with. We got
there with policemen on standby. Then I saw my wife and one of my
children and we went in there. In the defence we prepared overnight, the
most important thing there was that the decree was promulgated after we
had been arrested and that it should not have been retroactive. But our
lawyer didn’t raise that point at all. So, I was very unhappy about
that and because we were not allowed to speak from the dock. If we had
been allowed to speak, I could have made the point that we didn’t commit
any offence. I had gone to the Federal Government Press to look for a
copy of the decree to buy after Mr. Omerua who was the Minister of
Information said there would be a decree soon. The decree wasn’t ready
when I went there. I wanted to study it but I didn’t know I would be a
victim of it later. I cannot begin to paint the picture of the whole
drama but on that day, everywhere was tense and it was obvious that
freedom was far from us.
Who was the judge?
It was Justice Ayinde. I understood that there was nothing we could do
to convince him. Even if we had said that the decree was promulgated
after the offence it wouldn’t have made any difference.
How did you feel when you were convicted and sentenced?
Oh, I felt sorry for Nigeria. I felt the government had been misled into
turning a patriotic journalist who slept in his office many times to
write stories at the Daily Times and Daily Sketch into a criminal. When
Chief Obafemi Awolowo said he did not agree with the presidential system
that was recommended by the Constituent Assembly in 1975, I was in
Daily Sketch then. I told the editor of Sunday Sketch, Sola Odunfa that I
would give him an article. That was on a Thursday. I did not sleep, I
wrote on why the presidential system is superior to the Westminster
model contrary to what Chief Awolowo said. I was at the Constituency
Assembly in 1978 and we told them that the idea of keeping journalists
out and asking them to be briefed by members was wrong. We wondered why
they didn’t do something more acceptable professionally and eventually
they decided they would give us a chance to meet the deputy chairman
around lunch time for briefing and then they would break up by 5 pm or
6pm after the afternoon session and would have another round of
briefing.
Otherwise we would have to meet each member of the assembly for
comments. It means that was unofficial, it could be tainted with
personal opinions. So, it’s now time for me to say that Decree 4 was
just meant to ensure that no professional can step out of line, that no
professional brought the government to ridicule or embarrassed the
government in any way. But when you now say Protection of Public
Officers against False Accusation Decree, what was my offence in saying
an embassy or a mission had been closed? Or that somebody had been
retired?
In fact, they were not even quarreling about the retirements because
all the reports were authentic. So, what is the embarrassment there?
There was no accusation in that. That is why government is a wonderful
institution, let’s put it that way. I discovered later that government
did not like what happened because we had in my report about those who
were posted, which was also embellished, names of certain people who
were not career diplomats, most of them were military officers. I think
whatever might have irritated or annoyed the military top brass was
that people were phoning them to tell them that this all-embracing unity
government they wanted to form had six out of eight people from the
northern part of the country as ambassadors or high commissioners. Was
that the kind of country they envisaged? I think that must have
embarrassed the government. But that wasn’t false accusation but they
were not analyzing grammar. They just felt embarrassed that people
asked them that question. That was why they asked who gave us
information. So, I would say the drama of that day was something I would
never like to be repeated.
Source
‘I’ve forgiven Buhari, Lets rally round and support him’ says Tunde Thompson, journalist jailed under Decree 4
January 11, 2015
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