The
Chairman Emeritus of DAAR Communications Plc, Chief Raymond Dokpesi,
has been listed as a witness in a N150bn libel suit against African
Independent Television before a Lagos State High Court in Ikeja.
The suit
is filed by a former Governor of Lagos State, Bola Tinubu, who alleged
that AIT impugned him with a documentary tagged “The Lion of
Bourdillon,” which the TV station aired severally in the build up to the
2015 general elections.
The
presiding judge, Justice Iyabode Akinkugbe, had on April 16 adjourned
further hearing in the matter till Wednesday, May 27, 2015.
A copy of
the documents filed by Daar Communications in opposition to Tinubu’s
suit and cited by our correspondent revealed that Dokepsi and seven
others would be appearing in court to testify in favour of Daar
Communications.
In its statement of defence and counter-claim, Daar Communications
insisted that Tinubu founded his entire claims on “a non- existent
ground or cause of action.”
The
company maintained that the information contained in “The Lion of
Bourdillon” was neither false nor neither aired to malign the person of
Tinubu as the national leader of the All Progressives Congress had
claimed.
Daar
Communications said AIT, as a member of the fourth estate of the realm,
was empowered by Section 22 of the Constitution to, at all times, hold those in government accountable and responsible to the people of Nigeria.
It said,
“The defendant avers that the claimant is a former public office holder
whose activities before, during and after leaving office are always in
the public domain for proper scrutiny, in accordance with the intendment
of the framers of the Nigerian Constitution.
“The defendant also avers that being in the business of information dissemination, it is aware that the contents
of the said documentary are not news to many Nigerians, a fact very
well known to the claimant, who took no steps to correct the information
embedded in the print media and the social media platforms for years.
“For example, the pseudonym, ‘Lion of Bourdillon,’
by which the claimant has come to be known, addressed and associated
with, over the years, was not given to him, or coined by the defendant.”
AIT insisted that the documentary, which it did not author, was only aired for a given short period of time and was last aired on March 6, 2015, when it got the wind that the defendant had filed a libel suit.
In his
statement on oath, Dokpesi maintained that AIT merely exercised its
constitutional, statutory and social responsibility to inform, educate,
entertain and provide a platform for national discourse, to all shades
of opinion and political persuasion.
Tinubu,
who complained that the documentary was targeted at impugning him, had
on April 1, 2015, through his counsel, Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN),
secured an order of interlocutory injunction restraining AIT from
further airing the documentary.
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