Brittle Paper force deputy editor out for article on Hadiza El-Rufai

Brittle Paper force deputy editor out for article on Hadiza El-Rufai

Otosirieze Obi-Young, the deputy editor of Brittle Paper, a digital literary journal, has exited the paper for what he considers to be censorship and

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Otosirieze Obi-Young, the deputy editor of Brittle Paper, a digital literary journal, has exited the paper for what he considers to be censorship and lack of freedom, TheGuardian is reporting.

The road to his forced exit which is generating controversies began after he wrote an article that was critical of novelist and the wife of Kaduna State governor of Hadiza Isma El-Rufai whose son, Bello had threatened sexual violence against the mother of a Twitter user @thanos_zer’s who disagreed with him over US Donald Trump’s leadership qualities in the face of COVID-19.

Bello El-Rufai tweeted a criticism of the American president saying he was doing a poor job of leading the United States during the coronavirus pandemic.
“There is nothing as radioactive as an incompetent leader during a time of crisis,” El-Rufai tweeted on Saturday evening. “The United States of America is a case in point. A few states in Nigeria too.”

In his response to that tweet, @thanos_zer wrote, “How about the absentee president in Nigeria?” El-Rufai was quick to dismiss @thanos_zer and his governor as incompetent. He erroneously profiled @thanos_zer as a southeasterner.

Unfazed, @thanos_zer responded, saying: “I don’t shield anyone who’s inept. I can’t say the same about you. You’re daddy’s boy and of course, nobody attacks the finger that feeds them. Buhari’s ineptitude is mind-blowing. Yes I said it and you’re not going to make me disappear!”

El-Rufai, a staunch supporter of Buhari, took an exception to being called a “daddy’s boy” and went to sexualise his antagonist’s mother, noting that he has heard about his mother’s “mind blowing” sexual capabilities. Moments later, @thanos_zer posted a screenshot of a direct message he said El-Rufai sent to him in which he (El-Rufai) threatened sexual violence and ethnic slur.

Although she later denounced her son’s tweets, Mrs El-Rufai’s initial failure to condemn her son’s tirade left many disappointed, including Obi-Young who did an article addressing the issue.
“Don’t @ me. Sow the wind, reap the whirlwind,” she wrote on Twitter on April 12. “All is fair in love and war. My belief: Respect everyone, but take no shit from anyone. I didn’t see any threats of rape. I would never condone that.”

Obi-Young’s criticism of Mrs El-Rufai initial failure to repudiate her son’s tweets was deemed below the editorial standard of Brittle Paper’s founder Ainehi Edoro. Obi-Young’s article titled “Novelist, Feminist & Kaduna First Lady, Hadiza El-Rufai, says all is fair in love and war after son’s gang-rape threat draws backlash” has been pulled from BP’s website.

“The Founder called me and expressed concerns about my criticism of a Nigerian newspaper in it and the informal and strongly-worded tone addressing said novelist. I edited the post, removing the relevant sections. The Founder called back a few minutes later and said she wanted me to take down the report. That was unacceptable to me. I saw no reason why my post-publication edits, which removed my opinion and restricted it to reportage, were not enough,” Obi-Young said.

Without being informed, he was logged out of Brittle Paper, its social media accounts, and its WhatsApp group – the primary work communication space. Edoro said Obi-Young whom she referred to as “a trusted friend,” defied editorial guidelines. While she condemned Mrs El-Rufai’s comments about her son’s “odious” tweets as “reprehensible”, she however insisted that her former deputy editor’s article was “impassioned, deeply personal piece reporting” with a couple of paragraphs offensive and libellous.

The paragraphs read: “Interestingly, four hours after backlash began to her response, an article appeared on ThisDay titled “Endearing Qualities of Kaduna First Lady, Hadiza El Rufai.” It is exactly as shabbily-written as you would expect of a hastily assembled, face-washing gimmick. But it is not as unintelligent as the one on OperaNews. There must be a name for this feminism whose reply to “Tell your mother I’m passing her to my friends tonight” is “I didn’t see any threats of rape.” A feminism that agrees to raise men to be better but says “All is fair in love and war” when their ethnic-bigoted men-children threaten violence on women’s bodies. Shame. Shame. Shame. Shame. Do better.

Edoro said she had no issue with Obi-Young’s article except for the “highly sensationalized” reporting and the potentially libellous reference to two Nigerian newspapers.

Both Obi-Young and Edoro have been vilified on social media. While Obi-Young was criticised for disrespecting Brittle Paper while still in its employment, others slammed the organisation for editing and republishing the article after it was initially removed from the website.