WikkiTimes has launched the Femi Falana Legal Defenders Fellowship, a new initiative aimed at strengthening legal protection for journalists and civic actors facing increasing intimidation, harassment, and abuse of legal processes in Nigeria.
The fellowship, announced in a statement signed by WikkiTimes Operational Manager, Nana Mohammed, is a one-year pilot programme designed to respond to the growing use of arrests, lawsuits, and other legal threats to silence investigative journalism and civic accountability work.
WikkiTimes noted that Nigeria’s media environment has become increasingly hostile, with journalists frequently exposed to arbitrary detention, surveillance, physical attacks, and strategic lawsuits intended to discourage public-interest reporting. The organisation stressed that the absence of structured, specialised legal support has left many journalists and civic actors vulnerable to rights violations and prolonged legal battles.
To address this gap, the Femi Falana Legal Defenders Fellowship will train, mentor, and deploy 25 early-career Nigerian lawyers to provide direct legal assistance to journalists and civic actors across the country. Fellows will be placed with selected law firms, chambers, and legal aid organisations where they will handle cases related to media freedom, access to information, and civic rights.
Participants in the programme will receive focused training in media law, constitutional and human rights law, digital rights, and relevant legislation affecting journalism, including the Cybercrimes Act. The fellowship also aims to build a network of lawyers equipped to challenge unlawful arrests, defamation suits, and other forms of legal intimidation commonly used against journalists.
The initiative is named after Femi Falana, Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), in recognition of his decades-long commitment to human rights advocacy, public-interest litigation, and the defence of press freedom in Nigeria.
WikkiTimes described Falana as a symbol of courage and consistency in the legal defence of journalists and marginalised groups.
In addition to legal representation, the fellowship will support the development of shared legal defence tools, including a public repository of legal resources and a Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation (SLAPP) defence guide to help journalists and lawyers better navigate intimidation-driven litigation.
WikkiTimes stated that details of the application process will be announced soon, inviting qualified early-career lawyers with a strong interest in media freedom, civic space protection, and public-interest law to apply.
The organisation expressed confidence that the fellowship would contribute significantly to safeguarding press freedom and strengthening democratic accountability in Nigeria by ensuring journalists are not left alone to face legal intimidation.

