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Home Opinion

THE Pen and the Shield: Why Nigeria Needs a Permanent Media–Security Partnership

The News Bearer by The News Bearer
June 22, 2026
in Opinion
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By Lanre Ogundipe

The recently-concluded National Security Summit organised by the Nigeria Union of Journalists was more than an event. It was an encounter between two institutions that have historically regarded each other with caution, sometimes with suspicion, but which now find themselves confronting a common challenge: the security and stability of Nigeria. The Summit deserves commendation.

At a period when insecurity has assumed multiple dimensions, terrorism, banditry, cybercrime, kidnapping, violent extremism, communal conflicts, misinformation and organised criminality – the gathering of journalists, intelligence agencies, military institutions, law enforcement bodies and policy makers was both timely and strategic.

Yet, beyond the speeches, the handshakes and the communiqué lies a more important question: What next? Will the Summit become another successful event that fades with time? Or will it mark the beginning of a new era of cooperation between the media and security institutions? I sincerely hope it becomes the latter.

For the truth is that the old assumptions governing the relationship between journalism and national security are no longer adequate for the complexities of the twenty-first century.

For decades, the media and security agencies have operated from positions of mutual suspicion. Journalists accused security institutions of secrecy, intimidation and hostility to press freedom. Security agencies complained about sensational reporting, misinformation and disclosures capable of compromising operations. Both sides had reasons for their grievances. Both sides also ignored a simple truth: they need one another.

The Summit brought that reality into sharper focus. For, perhaps, the first time in recent memory, there was an open acknowledgement that the media and security institutions are not adversaries. They are partners. This admission is profound. It changes the conversation. The nature of security itself has changed. National security is no longer defined solely by guns, barracks, intelligence dossiers and military operations.

Today, security includes: information warfare; cyber threats; violent extremism; economic sabotage; organised crime; social cohesion; public confidence; and the battle against misinformation. Information itself has become a battlefield. Terrorists deploy propaganda. Criminals manipulate social media. Rumours inflame communal tensions. Fake news erodes trust in institutions. Disinformation destabilises societies.

In such an environment, journalism cannot remain a distant observer. The media is part of the ecosystem. It shapes narratives. It influences perceptions. It builds confidence. It can calm societies. It can also inflame them. This reality places a heavy responsibility on journalists, but responsibility inevitably raises questions: Can journalists collaborate with security institutions without compromising their independence? Can partnership exist without co-option? Can the media support national security without becoming an unofficial arm of the state? These are legitimate concerns.

As one who belongs to a generation of journalists that fought for press freedom under difficult circumstances, I do not dismiss them lightly. The independence of the media remains sacred. A journalism that merely reproduces official narratives ceases to be journalism. A press that abandons its watchdog role loses public trust. The pen must never surrender its conscience.

Yet independence should not be confused with isolation. Professional engagement is not surrender. Dialogue is not subservience. Collaboration is not capitulation.

Democracy flourishes when institutions engage one another honestly while respecting their separate constitutional mandates. The media informs. Security agencies protect. The judiciary adjudicates. The legislature legislates. The executive governs. Each institution is autonomous, yet none survives in splendid isolation.

The National Security Summit therefore presents Nigeria with a historic opportunity. The challenge now is to ensure that the momentum does not evaporate. The Summit must not end as a one-off event. It should become the foundation of a permanent framework of engagement.

There should be:

<span;><span;>- regular media-security dialogues;

<span;><span;>- specialised training in security journalism;

<span;><span;>- crisis communication protocols;

<span;><span;>- fact-verification mechanisms;

<span;><span;>- peace journalism initiatives;

<span;><span;>- cybersecurity awareness programmes;

<span;><span;>- and structured engagements at national, zonal and state levels.

The Nigeria Union of Journalists is uniquely positioned to champion this vision. Its membership cuts across the federation. Its branches are embedded within communities. Its members operate in newspapers, radio, television and digital media. No other media institution possesses this breadth of reach.

The Union can become the bridge between:

<span;><span;>- journalists and intelligence agencies;

<span;><span;>- the media and security institutions;

<span;><span;>- government and citizens;

<span;><span;>- security imperatives and democratic freedoms.

This proposition is not without precedent. In the United Kingdom, media organisations and security agencies maintain structured channels of engagement during periods of national emergency. In the United States, particularly after September 11, cooperation deepened in areas such as terrorism reporting, cyber security and crisis communication. Singapore integrates the media into its national resilience architecture. South Africa has institutionalised media-security dialogues through conferences and professional engagements. None of these arrangements extinguished press freedom. If anything, they strengthened professionalism. Nigeria should not be different.

There is another reason this conversation is important. Journalism itself is changing. Technology has transformed how news is produced and consumed. Social media has weakened traditional gatekeeping. Misinformation competes with verified facts. Public trust in institutions is declining. The economic foundations of journalism are under pressure. The profession must therefore reinvent itself.

The future of journalism will depend not only on courage but also on competence. Not only on independence but also on relevance. Not only on criticism but also on constructive engagement. The media must continue to speak truth to power. But it must also recognise that it has a stake in the survival of the society it reports on. A nation perpetually at war with itself offers little room for free expression. Security and liberty are not enemies. They are partners.

I believe in such partnerships. I believe journalists can cooperate without becoming captive. I believe security agencies can engage without seeking obedience. I believe criticism and patriotism are not mutually exclusive. And I believe that journalism in Nigeria must evolve if it is to remain relevant in a rapidly changing world.

The National Security Summit has shown that such evolution is possible. The responsibility now is to ensure that the Summit becomes more than a memory. It must become a movement. It must become an institution. For if the shield protects the nation from physical threats, the pen protects it from ignorance, fear and falsehood. Nigeria needs both. And history will judge us not merely by how well we wielded them separately, but by how wisely we deployed them together.

•Lanre Ogundipe, a public affairs analyst and former President, Nigeria Union of Journalists and Africa Union of Journalists, writes from Abuja.

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