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NIGERIA’S JOURNALISTS AND LAW OF LIBEL

<p><font color="#404040">One despicable issue that has over the years taken the industrial time of both medieval and contemporary media practitioners revolve on how possible to avert the mention of libel in their ceaseless and priceless publications. </font></p>
<div><font color="#404040">This intractable issue, no doubt, has driven the print media to guard their information intended publications like the only egg of the fowl while exercising its constitutional functions of education, entertainment, information and cultural correlation of the parts of the society. </font>
<div><font color="#404040">These essential and cardinal functions have further been evaluated by the engagement of well tested and proven scholars exhumed from different academic strata to man and decisively checkmate unintended libellous words and statements that may find the way into print media page. </font>
<div><font color="#404040">This, to an extent, unveils the unwillingness of the print media to romance the tides of libel action. Again, the writ of corrigendum and apology further indexes the print media preparedness to create the enabling environment to work and protect the integrity and privacy of the government and every right-thinking member of the society generally. </font>
<div><font color="#404040">However, the constitutional rights of the mass media especially the print keeps aglow for it to keep its heterogeneous audience on the quivive on the goodies and dangers of the environment. This is why the gate keeping exercise &ldquo; has remained a barometer to access editors and their cohorts.&rdquo; </font>
<div><font color="#404040">Sequel to this, one is made to observe that the constitutional rights of the media to inform, educate and entertain member&rsquo;s of the society do not approve the application of malice, hatred and unjust attack in the art of news reporting and publications. </font>
<div><font color="#404040">Legally, the law of defamation exists to guide the media and protect the reputation of the individual in both his moral and professional reputation from unjustified attack. The law, as it is, refers to a set of rules by which citizens of a state regulate their conduct in relation to their fellow citizens and to the state. It is wide, severe and punitive. </font>
<div><font color="#404040">This is why it has become imperative for the journalist, the publisher and distributor of newspapers – indeed for everyone that earns his living with words to be conscious of the perils associated with the law of defamation. </font>
<div><font color="#404040">Viewed from legal prism and pinnacle, libel in general represents written and recorded firm in a firm or less permanent nature like photography, cartoon, statue, picture, caricature, moving cinematography, television, pictures or images, documentary, etc designed to expose an individual to hatred, ridicule or contempt, cause him to be shunned or avoided, disparage him in his office, profession or trade and again, lower him in the estimation of right thinking members of the society generally. </font>
<div><font color="#404040">In view of this, the law recognises in every man a right to have estimation in which he stands in the opinion of others unaffected by false and defamatory statements and imputations. </font>
<div><font color="#404040">However, the emergence of libellous remarks in any given publication reveals an index of malice contrary to the harmony talked about by the law as the seeming rapport between the government, media and the general public. Media vigilance arising from constant gate keeping has for sometime now remained futile in what media kith and kin in the learned world described as innocuous statement. A legal school of thought sees innocuous statement as one embracing more than one meaning; a statement that is innocently tailored but capable of defamatory meaning by virtue of the surrounding circumstances. </font>
<div><font color="#404040">Again, ecclesiastics school of thought differ from the legal school of thought in that it consider as distinguishing defamation from injurious falsehood, innuendo, abuse or vulgar words that may be defamatory in nature. </font>
<div><font color="#404040">Despite this glaring differences, the fear of uncertainty encapsulating libel actions like cost of damages, the circumstantial nature of innuendo and lack of standard measurement to establish the worth of a man&rsquo;s good reputation or at least, the extent to which it was in danger of being libelled by a false statement of unfair criticism) ushers danger to careless and provocative publications. Libel, although, not much more permanent in character, bites more in harming the reputation of the affected plaintiff. </font>
<div><font color="#404040">Libel, of course, manifests in the form of criminal, blasphemous, seditious and obscenity. These branches of libel constitute a rock of headache to any media outfit that hubnubs with reports devoid of fairness and justification and objectivity. </font>
<div><font color="#404040">Believing the fact, in every wrong there is a corresponding remedy basically to avert injuria sine damno a media outfit so caught in the web of libellous act can seek redress by applying the principle of fair comment, justification, rolled-up-plea, absolute privilege, consent or volenti non fit injuria etc. </font></div>
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Ibrahim Garba: I was born September 20,1978 at Gwarzo town in Gwarzo local government of kano state to the family of late Alhaji Garba Shuaibu and Hajiya Zainab Garba. Iam a Diploma Holder in Mass communication from Bayero University Kano,and also Iam a practising journalist based in Kano,Nigeria.
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