By Albert David
The latest press release from the Independent Media Commission (IMC) lands not as a routine regulatory update, but as a troubling marker of the country’s deteriorating media climate. What should have been a demonstration of principled oversight instead reads like a catalogue of punitive actions that raise profound questions about fairness, proportionality, and the future of civic expression in Sierra Leone.
At face value, the IMC frames its decisions as a commitment to “accuracy,” “professional standards,” and “public trust.” Yet the pattern embedded in these rulings suggests something far more disturbing: a regulatory environment increasingly shaped by selective enforcement, political sensitivities, and an unmistakable tightening of control over dissenting or inconvenient voices.
Across the cases cited, the IMC imposes a cascade of fines, retractions, and sanctions, many of them justifie


