Shettima: Boko Haram’s video, sign of weakness

By Musa Umar Bologi
Abuja

Borno state governor, Kashim Shettima has described the purported video by Boko Haram insurgents as a sign of weakness of a defeated group.
Shettima made the observation yesterday at a workshop on synergy between the media and the military, jointly organised by the 7th Division of the Nigerian Army and the Borno state council of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), held at the Pinnacle Hotel, Maiduguri.
He said: “The Boko Haram insurgents are always coming up with psychological warfare strategies. What we must know, is that for every video that the Boko Haram releases, they are using such videos as weapons in their fight; the videos are weapons in psychological warfare with the intention of slowing down our troops, showing strength on the part of the insurgents, in order to instil fear in the public, instil fear in our troops, instil fear in us, the leaders and instil fear in you, the journalists who constitute members of the most strategic public.

“When the journalist helps to propagate insurgents’ warfare,  the journalist himself is not spared, after all. When Boko Haram was planning a suicide attack on the busy Emab Shopping Plaza in Abuja, they didn’t care whether a senior editor of The New Telegraph was going to be affected. They attacked that Plaza in June, 2014 and Suleiman Bisalla, a Deputy Editor, was one of those killed in Abuja.
“The same thing happened in Kano when Enenche Akogwu, a reporter and camera man with Channels TV was killed during attacks by Boko Haram on 20th of January, 2012 in Kano. The instances are many and this is why the journalist must see him or herself as an important stakeholder in National Security; as someone who has a role to play in discouraging the propaganda of Boko Haram.”
Shettima also paid glowing tributes to the Military, Police, DSS, para-military, civilian JTF and journalists working in the state, describing them as courageous men and women who defied intense fears and threats to help in addressing the challenges posed by the insurgents in different ways.

Recalling some odd moments, the governor said, “around 2013, there were times I had to personally relocate some of the journalists from dangerous locations in Maiduguri to safe locations.
“I was very particular about the Christians amongst them. Even within the Christians, I was more particular about those who neither understood nor spoke our local languages in Maiduguri. These journalists were exposed to possible attacks, they were being regarded
as security men or some sort of spies given the fact that at that time, we had Boko Haram fighters living in communities as against what it is today.”
The workshop was attended by senior military and paramilitary officials, including the Theatre commander, Operation Lafiya Dole, Maj.-Gen. Irabor as well as the GOC 7th Division aside officials from outside the state.
Shettima spoke after a paper delivered by former Defence spokesman, Gen. Chris Olukolade (retd), whose presentation portrayed the Nigerian media as mostly working against efforts by the Nigerian military in the fight against Boko Haram across the northeast.
The governor, in his address, said in developed countries, the media is often taken into confidence and told the truth about security situations with the understanding that the media manage their reports in ways that do not undermine security interests of their host countries.

“I had asked myself many times that why was it that in developed countries, Presidents and other leaders would go to places like Afghanistan and Iraq to meet with their soldiers at the battle fronts but such visits would not be instantly reported by leading media houses of the world like the CNN, BBC, New York Times, Aljazeera, Reuters, AFP and other media establishments.
“Reports about these visits would mostly be made public only days after the visit of the President or when the media is sure that the safety of the Presidents at the front lines in Afghanistan would not be compromised. A lot of us have heard how the CNN reported meetings between President Obama and troops in battlefields only days after such visits.
“The International media completely shielded Prince Harry when he was fighting as a soldier and member of the British troops in Afghanistan between 2007 and 2008. He was only reported 10 weeks into his deployment after leaving dangerous point in Afghanistan.

“Let us now compare this with a classical situation in Nigeria. When President Goodluck Jonathan was said to be planning to visit Chibok in 2014, the trip was instantly revealed by virtually all Nigerian media houses even when at that time, the visit was supposed to be a secret one in order not to compromise the safety of the President given the strength of the Boko Haram at that time.
“So, like I said at the beginning, I had asked myself, what was it that made the International media concealed President Obama’s and Prince Harry’s visits to Afghanistan and what was it that made our major media houses to act differently by revealing President Goodluck Jonathan’s planned visit to Chibok.
“I was wondering until I met one very experienced journalist in Lagos who had worked with both Nigerian media and one of the leading international media establishments in Europe, and that journalist told me a very simple reason that made the difference. The journalist said to me, that the reason why the International media don’t give instant or live reports concerning the visits of Presidents and world leaders to any dangerous places is because the international media houses are taken into confidence by those in charge of managing the information on the side of the world leaders.
“The International media establishments are told well about the plan and requested to give blackouts or delayed report instead of real time.

At most, the media houses would mostly request that their reporters cover the trip or that clips are given to them at the same time without giving undue advantage to any media house so as for all to break the news simultaneously after the visit,” he explained.
Continuing, the governor said, “if you compare that strategy with our case, it becomes clear that we mostly try to hide important steps from the Nigerian media; we try to beat the media by keeping our plans away from them, with a wrong notion that our journalists do not have the capacity to know that which we hide from them.
“The worst assumption any newsmaker can ever have is to assume that any journalist lacks the capacity to find out what is being kept away from the journalist. In the relationship between the newsmaker and the journalist, the newsmaker mostly wants to be the one to give out what he wants the journalist to know while on the other hand, the job of the journalist is not to just to report what the newsmaker tells but to be more curious about what the newsmaker didn’t tell, what the news-maker doesn’t want to tell and why he doesn’t want to tell.
“This is always the mindset of a good journalist. So, what is the way out? The way out is to tell the journalist the whole story, the whole truth and seek his or her understanding in managing the truth.”