Friday, June 19, 2026 -The Court of Appeal in Abuja has dismissed an appeal filed by the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) challenging a Federal High Court judgment that barred the commission from imposing fines on broadcast stations.
Delivering judgment, Justice Jane Esienanwan Inyang held
that the appeal was “fundamentally defective” and therefore incompetent.
The appeal arose from a January 17, 2024 judgment by Justice
Rita Ofili-Ajumogobia of the Federal High Court in Abuja, which restrained the
NBC from enforcing N5 million fines imposed on several broadcast stations in
2022. The sanctions had been issued over allegations that the stations
undermined Nigeria’s national security by airing documentaries on banditry and
insecurity in the country.
The affected broadcasters included Multichoice Nigeria
Limited, owners of DStv, TelCom Satellite Limited (TSTV), Trust TV Network
Limited and NTA StarTimes Limited. The case was initiated by Media Rights
Agenda (MRA), a media rights advocacy organisation that challenged the legality
of the fines.
In her ruling, Justice Inyang noted a critical discrepancy
in the appeal documents. She explained that the respondent before the Federal
High Court was listed as the “National Broadcasting Commission,” while the
notice of appeal identified the appellant as the “Nigerian Broadcasting
Commission.” According to the court, the inconsistency was significant and
deprived the appellate court of the jurisdiction required to hear the appeal.
“The notice of appeal is the foundation of an appeal and a
condition precedent to the exercise of appellate jurisdiction by this court,”
Justice Inyang held. As a result, the court struck out the appeal without
considering the substantive issues raised by the commission.
The ruling marks another legal setback for the NBC in its
efforts to defend its power to sanction broadcasters. In April 2026, the Court
of Appeal also dismissed a separate appeal filed by the commission against
another judgment that prohibited it from imposing fines on broadcast stations.
Earlier, in May 2023, the Federal High Court in Abuja ruled
that the NBC lacked the judicial authority to impose penalties on media
organisations. The controversy over NBC’s sanctioning powers dates back several
years. In March 2019, the commission fined 45 broadcast stations N500,000 each
for alleged violations of the Nigerian Broadcasting Code during the general
elections.
At the time, the then Director-General of the NBC, Is’haq
Kawu, said the penalties were imposed for ethical breaches and violations of
broadcasting regulations. The latest Court of Appeal ruling further reinforces
previous judicial decisions limiting the commission’s authority to impose fines
on broadcasters without recourse to the courts.

0 Comments