DSS blames ‘mistaken identity’ on Soyinka’s arrest, releases his passport
The Department of State Services (DSS) has said the arrest of Adejuwon Soyinka, the West African editor of The Conversation Africa, was due to a “mistaken identity.”
The secret police has also released his passport which it seized upon his arrest.
Last week Sunday, Soyinka was detained by the DSS at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos, shortly after arriving from the United Kingdom.
TheCable quote Peter Afunanya, spokesperson for the DSS, as saying that the pioneer editor of the BBC pidgin service was arrested at the request of another agency.
A few hours after his arrest, the journalist was released following the intervention of the International Press Institute (IPI) Nigeria, a global network of editors, media executives, and communication experts.
But his passport remained seized.
On Friday, Soyinka was accompanied by Inibehe Effiong, the human rights lawyer, to the DSS office in Ikoyi, Lagos to retrieve the passport.
Speaking on the development, Effiong said the secret police attributed the arrest of the journalist to “mistaken identity”.
The arrest of Soyinka is the latest in the spate of attacks against journalists under the administration of President Bola Tinubu.
In March, Segun Olatunji, a former editor of FirstNews, was arrested in Lagos.
In May, Daniel Ojukwu, a journalist with the Foundation for Investigative Journalism (FIJ), was detained by the police for 10 days.
The Nigeria Police Force National Cybercrime Centre (NPF-NCCC) has also detained several journalists and whistleblowers over petitions filed against them.
Several journalists were also harrassed and assaulted during the #EndBadGovernance protests across the country.