Ayoodeji Moradeyo, a senior reporter with the
Lagos-based Television Continental (TVC), was covering a
political event in the state when some PDP party agents
seized him, beat him up, and handed him to the police for
detention.
Mr. Moradeyo
was beaten up by thugs working for Iyiola Omisore, the governorship
candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). He was then
whisked away early in the afternoon by security agents, but has now
been released. Reports about his abduction instantly went
viral, spreading panic among his family members and other reporters, with
some sources asserting that his capture was politically motivated.
Working as TVC’s correspondent in Ondo State, Mr. Moradeyo
had been assigned by his editors in Lagos to join a team of reporters
in Osun State. They were covering the forthcoming governorship election
scheduled for Saturday, August 9.
In a phone call with SaharaReporters shortly after his release,
Mr. Moradeyo said he and his news crew were ambushed at a news event
by thugs working for the PDP, one of the opposition parties in the
coming election.
“I was at the office of the PDP in the state to balance my
report over some allegations. Immediately I got there and introduced
myself, they started calling me all sort of names. They said our
station belongs to the ruling opposition party in the state and is being run
and funded by one of the popular opposition leaders in Lagos,” said Mr.
Moradeyo. “I was bruised, and received the beating of my life. They
tore my clothes, seized my phones and damaged some of my recording
devices," he said, "I had never been handcuffed in my life
before today. I was handed over to the police and thrown into a waiting van as
if I was a criminal.”
Mr. Moradeyo said he was
subsequently detained for several hours at the offices of
the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) of the Osun
State police command in Osogbo, where he was denied access to some
of his colleagues who besieged the station.
“They refused to tell me my offence, after I was barred
from seeing my colleagues who came to the station,” he
said. According to him, he was later freed
with a warning “to beware in Osun State.”
SaharaReporters placed several phone calls to the Osun State police public relations officer, Folashade Odoro, but she had not responded to our calls as at the time of writing this report.
SaharaReporters placed several phone calls to the Osun State police public relations officer, Folashade Odoro, but she had not responded to our calls as at the time of writing this report.
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