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We Did Not Suspend Channels Television’s Operations, We Only Warned Them Over IPOB Interview – NBC
The National Broadcasting Commission has made a clarification over reports that it fined and suspended Channels TV.
The National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) has refuted claims that it fined Channels Television N5 million..
According to NBC, it only warned the station over the broadcast of an interview with a leader of an outlawed group, IPOB.
The letter signed by the commission’s Director-General Armstrong Idachaba which partly read âfor obviously breaching the above provisions of the Law, your station remains liable to sanctions provided in section 15 of the Code which prescribes among others â suspension of broadcast license and a fine of 5 million”, had been interpreted to mean that the TV station has been suspended.
The commissionâs Public Affairs Director, Franca Aiyetan who spoke to Premium Times after the controversy the letter incited, said it is a regulatory instrument to warn the TV station against the repetition of the controversial interview held on its Politics Today programme on Sunday night.
Aiyetan added that “these letters go to stations to either caution, warn or draw their attention to what they are doing right or wrong and when this is done twice, what follows is fine.â
She said;
âIt is actually mischievous that it comes on air and what the letter was saying was calling Channels attention to a particular programme that the commission felt was not handled professionally or ethically and calling their attention to the gravity of the offence. The quote says if you do this you are likely to be shut down with a fine and afterwards it says desist from that programme. It didnât say stop that programme.
âThe letter was drawing their attention to the gravity of the programme they held and they were advised to take it or stop it.
âIt was not a malicious thing. It was a hype; you can see that Channels is still up carrying some of NBCâs programmes. It is hyped because of the tension in the society and NBC is saying that the duty of journalism, especially broadcasting stations, is to douse this tension rather than heightening it. That is what the ethics say.
âThat was exactly what happened during the #EndSARS protests but some stations maliciously went on to say they were fined because they covered the #EndSARS protest. They were not fined because they covered the protest but because they hyped the violence that followed. When you show violence as happened in Kano or Rivers, the people in Kogi and Lagos will follow suit and everyday you show us new violence, before you know it everyone will be frightened.
âWe are saying you can help us to douse it rather than hyping it.â