Businessman Jimi Wanjigi sits attentively during the requiem mass of
Jacob Juma at All Saints Cathedral on May 12, 2016. PHOTO | JEFF ANGOTE |
NATION MEDIA GROUP
Nation journalists who wrote an exposé about Mr Jimi Wanjigi have received threats from the tender baron’s Twitter handle.
The
account, @JimmyWanjigi, is unverified but has the businessman’s
pictures and posts that are consistent with his previous activities.
It
has been used before to post Mr Wanjigi’s reaction to news that he had
been banned from visiting Tanzania, among other posts touching on him.
A
statement from a Nduta Mwangi, identified as the head of communications
at Kwacha Group of Companies, the Wanjigi family company, was posted on
the account.
GNASHING TEETH
The latest post warns the Nation
journalists: “The @NationMediaGrp team attacking me finally I’ve all
yours (sic) names. @NASA_Ke will rule the country & your families
will gnash their teeth.”
The Nation
could not verify the account, in existence since November 2015, by
calling Mr Wanjigi because it was not considered safe for a reporter to
call him.
In the story, the Nation
reported Mr Wanjigi’s links to Mr Raila Odinga’s National Super
Alliance and the fact that the businessman was also instrumental in the
formation of the alliance between President Uhuru Kenyatta’s The
National Alliance (TNA) and DP William Ruto’s United Republican Party
(URP) prior to the 2013 elections.
The two parties led the Jubilee coalition to election victory.
FIGHT CORRUPTION
Mr Wanjigi is believed to have fallen out with Jubilee over the standard gauge railway, which he had sought to broker.
The investigative articles are part of a Nation
campaign—called the Nation 10-point Agenda—a key plank of which is to
expose and fight corruption and State capture and convince parties to
build anti-corruption platforms going into the election.
The
articles have triggered a wave of accusations between Mr Kenyatta’s
Jubilee Party and Mr Odinga’s Nasa with the latter daring the government
to arrest Mr Wanjigi if he has committed a crime.
This was after Jubilee leaders said in several political rallies that Nasa was being funded by Anglo Leasing “graft cartels”.
RECEIVED WITH OUTRAGE
Mr
Wanjigi’s threat was received with outrage by the media industry with
Kenya Media Owners Association (MOA) saying it will take legal action
against him.
MOA chairman Hanningtone Gaya said: “It is
shocking that, at this moment and time, somebody still has the audacity
to threaten a whole leading media house of Nation’s calibre. This
clearly indicates that the law governing the media is weak.”
Mr
Gaya said the work of the media is to inform the public and set the
public agenda and it will continue to do so without fear or favour. The
chairman said Mr Wanjigi “should immediately apologise or else we will
take legal action”.
The
African Editors Forum (TAEF) chairperson, Jovial Rantao also condemned
in ‘‘the strongest possible terms, acts of intimidation aimed at
journalists working at Nation’’.
LOADED STATEMENT
NMG editor in chief Tom Mshindi said: “That’s a loaded statement from Mr Wanjigi which he should be made to explain.
If he intends it as a threat to Nation journalists, we advise him that neither the Nation nor its journalists will be intimidated.
Nasa should also tell Kenyans whether it associates itself with such intimidating statements.”
Lawyer
Charles Kanjama said Article 34 of the Constitution is clear on Press
freedom. He said anyone aggrieved by the stories should seek legal
redress.
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