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Dying to Live

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Perhaps, it was not paradoxical that he died in a most controversial way. After death, Giwa did not cease to excite more controversies. Who killed him? And why?

Journalists are the same everywhere, except possibly, those in the communist enclaves where the authoritarian theory of the press rules supreme. In the freer worlds from Washington to London to Cairo, to Nairobi, to Accra and to Lagos (?), they are all what Gay Talese says they are: restless voyeurs who see the warts on the world, the imperfections in people and places.”

Even the non-journalists who are keen observers of the profession have come to accept the notion that for journalists, normality is anathema, if not an outright abomination. Not for them, these purveyors of news, is the normal life, life that is full to the brim with routine, life that is a monumental bore. No, they have developed some kind of sadistic attitude to life that is sane and sound. Such life is not the stuff of which news is made. News that makes the front pages, news that makes this fragile earth shakes to its foundation, news that informs those with open minds and makes the sinners stink to hell, news that makes the world go round.

Those who are in this business of reporting are more at home with news of riots and raids. Call it sensationalism. If you dare. They are lured by disaster and gloom, disagreements and controversies, deaths and destruction. The more bizarre the piece of action, the better.

And what could be more bizarre than a death in the family, death parcelled, sealed and delivered to a journalist’s happy home, a home full of life and conviviality? And at breakfast time when father, mother and kids should be eating, chatting and suffering the distraction of the little ones, the gifts of God, without whom, homes are usually never lively.

That was when death chose to call at the home of Dele Giwa, editor-in-chief and chief executive of Newswatch. It did not come stealthily as people have been told is the cowardly practices of death. It came with a bang. It came in the form of a bomb packaged as a parcel. It knocked the door and Giwa welcomed it into his study, the nerve centre of this ebullient journalist’s intellectual and journalistic activities. That was where he ate, read, thought and wrote. That was where he ushered in death. He looked death in the face and smiled. Those who knew Giwa well would bet that Giwa must have dared death to do its worst that Sunday morning, October 19.

And it did its worst. It made Giwa the first Nigerian, we hope the last to be bombed to pieces in his own home, in Nigeria, in peace time. It blow him up in the prime of his life and threw journalists, lovers of the unusual, into panic and pandemonium. As a courageous and efficient journalist who did not fear to step on any toes, he was a controversial national figure, whose name, in so short a time, became a household word. Excellence was his middle name, controversy his nickname. Perhaps, it was not paradoxical that he died in a most controversial way. After death, Giwa did not cease to excite more controversies. Who killed him? And why?

There are as many theories as there are many Nigerians, some sensible, some ridiculous. Whatever it is, one thing is clear; confusion, as Macduff said when announcing the murder of King Duncan, has made its master-piece. Those who killed Giwa have murdered sleep and can never ever sleep again.

As a successful journalist, he made plenty of friends in all walks of life, in high and low places. He equally made powerful enemies. Giwa represented all that a journalist should be – fearless, meticulous, observant and hardworking.

He was up there on the social ladder, moving with the shaker and the movers and sharing thoughts with them on national, international and, most important, economic issues.

Giwa was a journalist’s journalist. Good journalists, as testified to by James Decakin, are grossly biased in favour of recalling facts. If there was anything you did not want anyone else to know, then you had better not tell Giwa. He had no patience with government and the so-called classified matters. But that is the cardinal role of any reporter: to reveal that which somebody wants to conceal. If you don’t want it revealed, for goodness sake, conceal it.

But the more you conceal, the more the handicap of the crusading journalist who second most important mission is to bring about improvement. The way to go about correcting a bad situation is to first make it known. This is where an inconocalstic reporter like Dele Giwa comes to a head on collision with the authorities, the business community, including the multinational corporations that specialise in the squandering of Nigeria’s wealth with the active connivance of their Nigerian errand boys and messengers. They do not want their malfeasance to come to the open. But Giwa, in the pursuit of his career, must have taken Thomas Hardy’s advice to heart: “if a way to the better there be, it exacts a full look at the worst.”

Nigerian journalists are still like their counterparts in most developing countries. A minority segment in politics and business believes they are a veritable threat. If they cannot be squared, they must be squashed. But the Nigerian journalists, unlike many other powerful interest groups, are the most patriotic lot. All they do is cry themselves hoarse every day so this God-forsaken country can know some progress. They are not subversive element. In fact, they are the most harmless, if you get to know them well.

They wield power, yes. That is because they are well informed. But they do not, as Stanley Baldwin once said, “exercise power without responsibility – the prerogative of the harlot throughout the ages.”

Why did they kill Dele Giwa, a gem of journalism, a paragon of excellent prose, a stickler for efficiency?

This generation owes Giwa a singular duty to uncover his killers and their motive for this dastardly and cowardly act. That is the debt we owe him. But we cannot pay this enormous debt if we allow hysteria to take the better of us; if we fail to rise above the murky atmosphere of rumours, gossips and disinformation that seem to have paralysed life since life was bombed out of a dear colleague and a brother.

 

First published on November 10, 1986.

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