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Channels TV Apologises To Buhari Govt Over IPOB Interview
Channels TV has apologised to Buhari govt over IPOB interview.
NewsOne Nigeria reports that the National Broadcasting Commission says Channels TV has apologised for airing a spokesman for separatist Indigenous People of Biafra on April 25.
This online news platform understands that Franca Aiyetan, NBC’s Director of Public Affairs, said this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria on Tuesday in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital.
The NBC’s Director of Public Affairs explained that the commission’s letter to the TV station was a regulatory instrument to check the excesses of the station called “the bridge letter.”
She added that the letter’s intent was not to close down or sanction the station. Instead, it was meant to draw the station’s attention to its breach of the broadcasting code, adding that “the station has accordingly apologised.”
According to the NBC’s Director of Public Affairs, the letter is asking Channels TV to explain why it gave credence to an organisation that the federal government already proscribed.
“It was actually not for public consumption. It was not a press release. It was a regulatory instrument to check the excesses of the station.
“It is a station that won an award. But we say in this particular situation. You did not handle it professionally. It is possible to bridge the public peace, and that was what the letter conveyed to Channels TV, to which the TV station has responded, saying we apologise, we did wrong,” she noted.
Speaking further, she explained, “When the media started asking me about Channels TV, I had to go and find out what letter we had issued out because if it is a press release or something that is for public consumption, it will come to the Public Affairs Department of NBC.
“I will be able to communicate to the media about it, but this letter that went to Channels TV is our way of regulating the broadcasting industry.
“It is called a bridge letter to the station to say in this particular programme you did not act professionally; you did not do it in line with the provision of the Nigeria Broadcasting Code.”
The director further stated that the particular programme in reference was an interview of somebody representing an organisation that the federal government already proscribed.
She said in the exercise of its power as the regulatory body, NBC wrote a letter asking Channels TV to explain why it gave credence to the spokesman of the proscribed organisation.
“The spokesman made lots of allusion that were not true, that are inciting and inimical to the peace of the society that could cause unrest.
“The NBC now said because of that this bridge attracts a shutdown or a fine of N5 million. But the pay line was that they were advised to discontinue the programme.
“Because when a station interviews live, they keep repeating it for maybe 24 hours before that kind of news will be dropped.
“And when I followed up on Monday, April 26, I discovered that the monitoring department that had written the letter had also received an apology letter from the Channels TV to say okay, we have received your letter and see where we went wrong, we are sorry.
“So it is now left for NBC to say this station has responded or reacted this way. The letter was neither meant to shut down the station nor sanction it. Rather, it is drawing their attention to what they have done.”
The NBC’s Director of Public Affairs added that the station was also free to write NBC back to say, “‘We stand on what we have done because in our own professional analysis of what we have done we think we are right.’”
Continuing, the NBC’s Director of Public Affairs stressed that, “‘Maybe NBC misinterpreted our intention.’ And when we have a situation like that, we invite the station to sit down at the dialogue table and understand where they are coming from.
“Then we will also explain to say this is what you intend to do, but for those receiving the signals, this is what it connotes, this is what the gravity of what you have done to the country.”