Segun Showunmi, former spokesperson to ex-Vice President Atiku Abubakar, has criticized the recent interview between Al Jazeera journalist Mehdi Hasan and Tinubu’s spokesperson, Daniel Bwala, describing it as “a public ambush.”
The statement was shared on Showunmi’s official X handle on Sunday.
According to him “What viewers witnessed was not a serious interview. It was an attempted public ambush.”

He further highlighted the aggressively confrontational tone of the exchange.
He added, “Questions were framed less as inquiries into governance and more as prosecutorial traps. Responses were repeatedly interrupted before they could develop, and clarifications were brushed aside.”
On the broader standards of journalism, Showunmi said, “The craft of interviewing demands discipline. It requires the ability to ask difficult questions while still allowing the guest to articulate answers. Intellectual confidence should permit disagreement without descending into open hostility. That commitment was glaringly absent.”
He also defended the concept of political realignment, criticizing the interview for implying that it is illegitimate.
“Democratic politics is built on shifting alliances. Individuals and movements evolve. Former opponents become partners when national circumstances demand cooperation. This is neither shocking nor dishonorable,” Showunmi explained.
Addressing tone and professionalism, he stressed, “A journalist who openly ridicules or repeatedly attempts to humiliate a guest crosses an important professional boundary. The role of the interviewer is to hold power accountable, not to behave like a courtroom prosecutor seeking a viral ‘gotcha’ moment.”
Showunmi concluded with a call for more substantive media engagement: “Audiences deserve interviews that illuminate policy, probe governance, and help citizens understand how leaders intend to confront the pressing challenges of the day.
“Respectful engagement does not weaken journalism; it strengthens it. Firm questioning does not require contempt. Professionalism does not require aggression.”
DAILY POST earlier reported that during his appearance on Al Jazeera’s Head to Head program, Bwala struggled to answer several questions posed by Mehdi Hasan.
Clips from the interview sparked nationwide reactions, with some Nigerians calling for Bwala’s removal, alleging that he embarrassed the country.
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