Home Blog Page 1782

#TwitterBan is aimed at insulating the government from criticism – Twitter says

Micro blogging social platform, Twitter, has pushed back on ban by the Nigerian Government.

It described it as brazen affront on citizens fundamental human rights and advised its users and other social media platforms in the country to download virtual private networks (VPNs) to enable them continue to use the platforms for their economic survival and social and political engagements while the “push back on this draconian order by the Nigerian government.”

In a statement released late Friday evening, Twitter said: “Today, the 4th of June 2021, the Federal Government of Nigeria announced its suspension of Twitter operations, that the application can be used as a platform for activities capable of undermining Nigeria’s corporate existence.

“Many Nigerians read the announcement of the ban on Twitter as a reflection of the importance of the platform and other digital (social media) platforms to Nigerians in accessing information and disseminating the same.

“The directive by the Nigerian government is at its core, an abuse of the rights of Nigerians not just to freedom of expression, but many other rights guaranteed in the Nigerian 1999 Constitution (as amended), the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

This suspension, which is a reaction of the Nigerian government to the company’s enforcement of its platform rules, is aimed at insulating the government from criticism, especially by Nigeria’s youth who are over 70% of the country’s population.

“It must be noted that Nigeria’s President has notably been insulated from every form of public accountability. He is perhaps the only president since the country’s return to democracy in 1999 who never grants live interviews or holds media chats. This move is therefore aimed at making him unaccountable to the people of Nigeria who constantly take to social media platforms to share their views on the actions and policies of the government.

“It is evident that shutting down Twitter is illegal and illegitimate policies such as this are unacceptable!

“A 2016 United Nations resolution affirms that the rights that citizens have offline must apply online. Coincidentally, this resolution was co-sponsored by Nigeria with others. We urge the Nigerian authorities to respect and enforce citizens’ fundamental rights as provided for by the Nigerian constitution and International human rights treaties that Nigeria is a party to.

“We will further contact the Ministry of Information to get exact details of this announcement, and the legal framework that supports such undemocratic pronouncement.

“We advise all users of twitter and other social media platforms in Nigeria to download virtual private networks (VPNs) to enable them continue to use the platforms for their economic survival and social and political engagements while we all push back on this draconian order by the Nigerian government.”

‘We plan to use facial recognition technology for elections’ – INEC

0

Nigeria’s electoral umpire, the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, has revealed that it intends to deploy the use of facial recognition in the conduct of future elections.

INEC said it is using technology to weed the country’s voter register of fraud and therefore is planning to commence the use of Electronic Voting Machines to update voter registration.

Prof Mahmood Yakubu, the Commission’s Chairman made this known while delivering the Keynote address at the Blueprint Newspaper’s 10th-anniversary celebration in Abuja, the country’s capital.

Mahmood represented by the Commission’s Director in charge of ICT, Engr. Chidi Nwafor was speaking on the topic “Technological innovation as an antidote for election rigging” said the commission has successfully deleted the information of over 15 million voters with duplicated information.

His words; “A credible voter’s register must ensure that a person only appears once in the register. So, we need to apply biometrics to the electoral process and we must start with biometric registration which will ensure the capacity to ensuring one man one vote.”

The commission said it has done a lot of work and has reached the conclusion “that rigging can come before, during and after the election and one thing is for us to find ways of stopping this. Few years ago, the entire processes involved in an election were rigged and the commission has moved to apply technology to this process.

“We plan to commence the use of Electronic Voting Machines (EVM) and it is important to update the voter registration to include additional biometric requirement. It will no longer be fingerprint alone.

“We are going to include facial capture which will strengthen the system. So, if you have been planning to dodge the fingerprint, you will also have to plan to dodge the facial because we will check all those details”. He said.

INEC also confirmed that it is ready to start the continuous voter registration on June 28.

#TwitterBan: Telecoms operators confirm they received orders to suspend Twitter

The Association of Licensed Telecommunication Operators of Nigeria (ALTON), an industry group, says it had received directives from the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), the industry regulator, to suspend access to Twitter.

The President of ALTON, Mr Gbenga Adebayo made this known in a statement made available to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos, on Saturday.

NAN recalled that the action may not be unconnected with Friday’s indefinite suspension of Twitter’s operations, two days after the social media giant deleted a tweet from President Buhari’s account.

Adebayo noted that the association wished to confirm that its members had received formal instructions from NCC, the industry regulator, to suspend access to Twitter.

“ALTON has also conducted a robust assessment of the request in accordance with internationally accepted principles.

“Based on national interest provisions in the Nigerian Communications Act, 2003, and within the licence terms under which the industry operates; our members have acted in compliance with the directives of NCC.

“We will continue to engage all relevant authorities and stakeholders and will act as may be further directed by the NCC, ” Adebayo said.

He said the association remained committed to supporting the government of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and upholding the rights of citizens.

As an industry, ALTON endorsed the position of the United Nations that the rights held by people offline must also be protected online, Adebayo’s statement said.

He noted that this included respecting and protecting the rights of all people to communicate, to share information freely and responsibly, and to enjoy privacy and security regarding their data and their use of digital communications.

Read: Full statement by Governor Seyi Makinde on FG’s suspension of Twitter’s operations in Nigeria

It has become imperative for me to release a statement regarding the suspension of Twitter’s operations in Nigeria by the Federal Government.

As leaders, we should go beyond emotional reactions to issues and think about how our actions will affect the people we lead and our international ratings socially and economically.

Twitter has become the platform for young people and indeed all Nigerians to exercise their fundamental right to express and publish an opinion. They use the platform to complain, argue and give feedback to government and its agencies who in turn, use these to improve policies. This is a fundamental point that should be kept in mind as we debate the necessity of this suspension.

We should also remember that Twitter has gone beyond a source of communication for many of our hardworking youths in Nigeria. It has become a source of livelihood for many, irrespective of their political affiliations or religious leanings. Nigerian youths and digital communications organisations earn a living from being able to use the platform to post communications on behalf of their clients.

Others who may not have physical stores also rely on Twitter to give visibility to their products and services.

Furthermore, I believe the Federal Government should be actively interested in how certain policies and action will affect investor confidence. I, therefore, use this medium to appeal to the Federal Government to reverse this suspension for the greater good of Nigerians.

~ Seyi Makinde, June 5, 2021

SPECIAL REPORT: Challenging Yahaya Bello’s Covid-19 Disinformation

1

Pastor Enoch Adeboye, a respected cleric in Nigeria created a major concern for officials promoting adherence to global health protocols and public vaccination against the coronavirus when he publicly endorsed the activities of Yahaya Bello, a sitting governor in Kogi state, North Central Nigeria.

The pastor who visited the Governor late last month at the Government House in Lokoja, the Kogi State capital, said the actions of Yahaya Bello towards Covid-19 show that the Governor “is a man of faith,” but conversely, the Governor has on several occasions engaged in misinformation campaigns and dangerous claims about covid-19 and the vaccines. 

We reproduce some of those claims here and fact-check them.

 Claim 1: In a video shared on the messaging app, WhatsApp, and microblogging site, Twitter,  Yahaya Bello repeatedly downplayed the effect of covid-19,  calling it a “common flu.”  The Governor further claims that “90% of the noise about covid is around political and financial…gains  and the remaining 10% is common flu known as cold.”

Bello encourages people with known Covid-19 symptoms like cold and catarrh to “take garlic.”,  a claim that is continuously being shared to this day.

Verification: In debunking the Governor’s claim that garlic cures covid-19, we first confirm the authenticity of the video by running a reverse video search using inVID, an online video verification tool. The search takes us to the official Facebook page of the Governor. The video now has about seventy thousand views, with about seven hundred comments and more than two thousand reactions.  

Having verified the authenticity of the video, we begin debunking the claims by entering the keywords ‘garlic+covid+WHO’ into google’s search engine. Our search takes us to the website of the World Health Organization (WHO).

Addressing the claim on the organization’s ‘Science in 5’ campaign run on WHO’s website,  Dr Sylvie Briand,  Director Department of Global Infectious Hazard Preparedness of the WHO said;

“So far we have no evidence that garlic is a treatment for this disease. Some studies are studying it but again we need to crosscheck the different studies before making any recommendation about garlic. What is for sure is that the abuse of garlic is not good.” She said

COVID NOT JUST POLITICAL NOISE

Covid-19 has so far shown itself to be more than just “political and economic” noise- it has caused ruins and shut down nations and economies.

On the human side of things, The WHO  coronavirus dashboard shows almost 170 million confirmed infections (as of 30th May 2021)  and more than 3 million deaths (as of 27th May 2021). Also, data from the Nigerian Center for Disease Control (NCDC) shows that Nigeria has recorded about 166 thousand confirmed cases and a little over two thousand deaths. 

The virus has also claimed notable politicians and businessmen in Nigeria, including Abba Kyari, the then Chief of Staff to President Muhamadu Buhari, who Bello mentions in the video, Senator Abiola Ajimobi, former Governor of Oyo State, Waheb Adegbenro, the Commissioner for Health in Ondo State amongst others. 

CLAIM 2:  The Kogi State Governor is seen in a widely circulated video claiming that the Covid-19 vaccine is being used to introduce diseases that will kill people. Governor Bello in the video discourages citizens and residents of his state from taking the vaccine.

His words; ‘’They want to use the vaccines to introduce the disease that will kill you and us. God forbid!”

Bello who is a graduate of Accounting further questioned the swiftness with which the Covid-19 vaccine was produced.

“These vaccines are being produced in less than one year of COVID-19. There is no vaccine yet for HIV, malaria, cancer, and for headache,” he said amidst a crowd of his supporters. 

Verification: The video is sourced from the YouTube page of the popular Nigeria news platform, Sahara Reporters. Bello seems to be addressing a crowd of supporters in what looks like a political rally. 

As to his claim on the vaccine causing illness,  checks on the website of the Center for Disease Control, CDC, the United State’s health protection agency, shows that his claims are false. The CDC insist that approved Covid-19 vaccines are safe and that it helps “our bodies develop immunity to the virus that causes Covid-19 without us having to get the illness.” Although some persons who got the virus might develop feverish symptoms, the CDC explains that it is a sign that the body is now building immunity for the virus. 

WHY SO FAST AND HOW?

Entering the query ‘Why was the covid vaccine developed so quickly?’ on the google search engine will bring up many results, including a University of Chicago news explainer of how they managed to have a vaccine in such a short period. Researchers from the university explained that a combination of hugely available resources and previous research on the Previous research in the One MERS vaccine (MVA-MERS-S) played a part in making the Covid-19 vaccine. 

The CDC insist that all Covid-19 approved vaccines followed the process for the development of vaccines. 

 


This publication was produced as part of IWPR’s African Resilience Network (ARN) programme, administered in partnership with the Center for Information Resilience (CIR), the International Center for Investigative Reporting  (ICIR) and Africa Uncensored.

NLC threatens another strike; accuse El-Rufai of refusing to honour agreement

0

The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has threatened to commence a fresh nationwide strike over non-implementation of the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed with the Kaduna State Government.

The NLC sounded the warning in a petition to President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday in Abuja.

The letter signed by NLC President Ayuba Wabba reads: “Your Excellency, Mr President, may recall that the first conciliatory meeting between the Nigeria Labour Congress and the Kaduna State Government took place on May 20, 2021.

”A major outcome of that meeting was a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU} signed by the Nigeria Labour Congress and the Kaduna State Government.

”The MoU specifically provided that there should be no further victimisation and harassment of workers and trade union leaders in the state, especially workers who participated in the warning strike.

”The Nigeria Labour Congress was also expected to maintain the suspension of the strike action while negotiations continued.

”To our greatest surprise, after signing the MoU with workers, the Kaduna State Government has gone ahead to impugn all the clauses in the agreement freely entered with the Nigeria Labour Congress.”

Mr Wabba said that some of the violations by the Kaduna State Government included the refusal of the state government to honour/respect the MoU signed at a meeting brokered by the Minister of Labour and Employment..

He also noted that others were the continuous violation of workers’ rights as provided in our labour laws, punitive transfer of the State Chairperson of the NLC.

He also said workers’ victimisation by sack for participating in the warning strike and violation of the “no victimisation” clause in the signed agreement.

”Non-adherence and respect for the rule of law,” he added.

”Your Excellency, Mr President, the National Executive Council (NEC) of the NLC on May 25, resolved that in case the Kaduna State Government remain adamant and recalcitrant or continues to pursue the path of war, threat and punitive actions against workers and their interests.

”That it had given the National Administrative Council (NAC) the power to re-activate the suspended industrial action in Kaduna State and also call for the withdrawal of all workers in Nigeria without any further notice,” the petition read in part.

The NLC on May 17, embarked on a five-day warning strike over the sack of thousands of workers in the public service by Kaduna State Government.

However, following the federal government intervention, the industrial action was called off after three days and an MoU was signed between the parties on May 20.

The NLC grievances include alleged retrenchment of workers by the Kaduna State Government, compulsory retirement of workers on Grade Level 14 and above.

Farooq A. Kperogi: “Fulanization” of the North by the South

0

Fears of “Fulani domination” have endured since Nigeria’s founding but, more than ever before, there is now an insanely unhealthy obsession with the Fulani in Nigeria’s South. The Fulani are not just routinely reviled with genocidal rhetorical venom, all manner of devious, supernormal political power is ascribed to them.

In the service of the reigning monomania about the Fulani, Northern Muslims, irrespective of their ethnicity, are now labeled “Fulani.” It’s worse if they are also beneficiaries of “juicy” political appointments in the Buhari regime.

Former Chief of Army Staff Tukur Buratai, for example, was habitually called “Fulani” even though he is Babur from southern Borno, a good portion of whom are Christians. The late Abba Kyari was called “Fulani” even though he was Shuwa (but linguistically and culturally Kanuri) from Borno.

When Muhammad Mamman Nami replaced Babatunde Fowler as the boss of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), many people in the South said Nami was “Fulani.” But Nami is Nupe from Niger State, and Nupe people are linguistically, historically, and geographically closer to Yoruba people than they are to Fulani or Hausa people.

There is a list doing the rounds on social media of supposed “Fulani” people who are holding strategic positions in Buhari’s government, but most of the people on the list are merely northern Muslims who are neither ethnically nor culturally Fulani. Take Nigeria Customs Service boss Hammed Ali, for example, who appears on the list. He is neither Fulani nor even Hausa. He is from the Jarawa ethnic group from Dass in Bauchi State.

Nigerian Television Authority’s boss, Yakubu Ibn Mohammed, is also on the list of “Fulani” appointees of strategic government agencies, but he is ethnically Jukun from Taraba State who grew up in Plateau State. 

NNPC boss Mele Kyari has also been assigned a “Fulani” ethnicity even though he is a straight-up Kanuri man from Borno. 

The only linguistically and culturally Fulani people on the list are FCT minister Mohammed Musa Bello and UBEC boss Hammed Bobboyi who are both from Adamawa State.

A reporter from the South recently interviewed me for a personality profile, and although one of the issues we discussed during the interview was the robust diversity of northern identities and how people mistake me for Fulani, Hausa, “Hausa-Fulani” or Nupe even though I am actually Baatonu from Kwara State, he still went ahead and described me as “Fulani” in his story. This shows how our preconceptions can sometimes distort our perceptions.

I corrected his unintentional mischaracterization of my ethnicity because he was kind enough to let me have a pre-publication readback of his story. 

In other words, the South is relentlessly rhetorically Fulanizing the North, particularly the Muslim North, just to fertilize and sustain a simplistic narrative of superhuman Fulani domination. One of my Fulani friends from Adamawa by the name of Idirisu Alkali tells me he is often simultaneously amused and flattered by the prodigious capacities that southerners endue on his people. 

The Fulani are now lionized in the South as the lifeblood of the North and the sole designers of all that is ill with Nigeria. But at the core of this sociologically impoverished monomaniacal fixation with the Fulani is a deep-seated but unacknowledged inferiority complex, which is fully realized in the tendency to describe as “Fulani slave” anyone who expresses opinions that depart from the forced and false consensus of the Fulaniphobes in the South. 

Since only “masters” can have “slaves,” people who call others “Fulani slaves” have clearly accepted the Fulani as “masters,” indicating that they have also internalized their own inferiority before the Fulani.

But the truth is that the Fulani are just as human as anyone else. They are not a stagnant, undifferentiated, unthinking human monolith with no dissensions. They have the same fears, anxieties, and pains as anybody else. They have both good and bad people like other groups. There’s no conspirative conclave where Fulani people meet and plot to dominate everyone else. They battle disunity within their ranks like all ethnic groups. In fact, like the Igbo, they agonize over the progressive erosion of their language and culture in much of Northern Nigeria.

Muhammadu Buhari on whose account the Fulani are ceaselessly dehumanized and vituperated is, in fact, not culturally or linguistically Fulani. In other words, although he traces patrilineal descent from the Fulani, he doesn’t understand or speak Fulfulde (as the language of the Fulani is called) and has no experience with Fulani culture.

Buhari’s father, Adamu Bafallaje, who was an ardo (as Fulani community elders are called), died in his real hometown of Dumurkul in the Daura Emirate of Katsina State when Buhari wasn’t old enough to know him, so Buhari was brought up by his maternal relatives in Daura. His maternal relatives are ethnically Kanuri people who are nonetheless culturally and linguistically Hausa.

As Mamman Daura’s daughter, Fatima Daura, wrote on the occasion of her father’s 80th birthday, Mamman Daura is Kanuri. The family’s forebears migrated from Borno to a town in what is now Niger Republic and finally to Daura. Note that Mamman Daura’s father, Dauda Daura, shares the same mother (but different fathers) with Buhari. So Buhari’s mother, Hajia Zulaiha, was Kanuri.

 Not having grown up with his father and knowing next to nothing about the Fulani, Buhari idealized not just his absent Fulani father but the Fulani people. This is a well-known psychological phenomenon that is encapsulated in the folk wisdom that says, “absence makes the heart grow fonder.” Barack Obama, for instance, idealized his absent Kenyan father—and his Luo people— with an intensity he would never have had if he’d grown up with him.

Buhari’s idealization of his absent Fulani father inspires an exaggerated identification with the Fulani in ways that alienate others and expose innocent Fulani people to unjustified animosity. That’s why I called him the “single greatest threat to the Fulani” in a July 6, 2019 column.

I also pointed out in a January 12, 2019 column titled “Miyetti Allah, Presidential Endorsement and Politics of Fulani Identity”  that “People who are on the edge of an identity tend to be more exaggeratedly aggressive in their assertion of the identity than those who are—or see themselves as being—in the mainstream of the identity.

“For instance, when there was a butcherly communal turmoil that pitted Bororo Fulani cattle herders against Yoruba farmers in the Oke-Ogun area of northern Oyo State in October 2000, Buhari led a group of ‘Fulani’ northerners to Ibadan to meet with the late Governor Lam Adesina where he told Adesina, among other things, ‘your people are killing my people.’ A Fulani person from the northeast is unlikely to say that.”

Nothing in what I’ve said is intended to mitigate the injustice of Buhari’s preferentialist style of governance. I started calling out what I called the “undisguised Arewacentricity” in Buhari’s appointment since 2015 when most people were scared to criticize the regime (read, for instance, my September 5, 2015 column titled “Buhari is Losing the Symbolic War”), but to put the entire moral weight of his wrongheaded choices on the Fulani and proceed to demonize them without let is both reprehensible and unconscionable. 

There’s no denying that northern Muslim elites have benefitted disproportionately in choice appointments in this regime, but “northern Muslim elite” isn’t synonymous with “Fulani.” 

An honest, empathetic role play would probably help. Imagine being from an ethnic group that’s perpetually slandered, maligned, reviled, and vilified as a national pastime because you share ethnic identity with someone—or some people—whose boneheaded policies smolder you like they do your traducers. How would you feel?

Demonizing people based on invariable attributes that are incidental to their humanity, such as their ethnicity or race, is akin to condemning them even before they were born. Malcolm X once called that the worst crime that can ever be committed. Let the toxic, hateful ignorance stop already! 

______________________________________

By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.

Twitter: @farooqkperogi

Disclaimer

It is the policy of NewsWireNGR not to endorse or oppose any opinion expressed by a User or Content provided by a User, Contributor, or other independent party. Opinion pieces and contributions are the opinions of the writers only and do not represent the opinions of NewsWireNGR.

‘Courts will reopen next week’ – Federal Government promises

The Federal Government says courts and state assemblies will re-open next week, following the resolution of the nationwide industrial dispute of the Judicial Staff Union of Nigeria (JUSUN) and Parliamentary Staff Association of Nigeria (PASAN) over the non-implementation of autonomy for State judiciary and legislature by the governors.

The Minister of Labour and Employment, Chris Ngige, stated this in Abuja yesterday shortly after a meeting between government delegation and strike workers to smoothen the grey areas in the Memorandum of Action (MOA) reached on May 20, 2021.

While speaking to journalists on the outcome of the meeting, Ngige said the 36 governors led by the Chairman of the Nigeria’s Governors’ Forum, Governor Kayode Fayemi, of Ekiti State and his Deputy, Aminu Tambuwal of Sokoto State, have put their pen on paper on behalf of their colleagues on the historic agreement which they reached on May 20th.

According to the minister, with what they achieved at the meeting, it is expected that the courts and state assemblies would re-open next week, since all the grey areas have been smoothened.

The Deputy President of JUSUN, Comrade Emmanuel Abisoye, thanked Ngige for his efforts in resolving the dispute, saying that he expects all the parties to fulfill their own part of the agreement.

Aisha Buhari deactivates her twitter account shortly after Nigerian government ban

0

Early Saturday checks by NewsWireNGR reveals that, Aisha Buhari, wife of President Muhammadu Buhari, has deactivated her account on Twitter. She announced a few seconds before midnight that she would deactivate her account.

“I will be deactivating my Twitter account for now. Long live Federal Republic of Nigeria,” she tweeted at 11:59pm on Friday.

Her post was tweeted shortly after the federal government made the announcement to ban the microblogging site from Nigeria Friday via the verified Twitter handle of the Federal Ministry of Information and Culture, @FMICNigeria.

The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, who announced the suspension in a statement, cited the persistent use of the platform for activities that are capable of undermining Nigeria’s corporate existence.

The statement also noted that the federal government had directed the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) to immediately commence the process of licensing all over-the-top media service and social media operations in Nigeria.

The announcement came days after Twitter deleted President Muhammadu Buhari’s tweet, in which he made a reference to Nigeria’s civil war of 1967 and its implications – Buhari had, in a series of tweets on Tuesday via his verified Twitter handle, @Mbuhari, stated, “Many of those misbehaving today are too young to be aware of the destruction and loss of lives that occurred during the Nigerian Civil War. Those of us in the field for 30 months, who went through the war, will treat them in the language they understand.”

INEC releases timetable for Anambra governorship elections

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has released the timetable for the conduct of the November 6 governorship election in Anambra state.


Festus Okoye, INEC’s spokesperson, disclosed this in a statement on Friday, noting that the activities for the election will commence on June 10 with primary elections for political parties.

He added that political parties with direct primaries must submit the names of their candidates at least seven days prior to the primary elections, as stated in the commission’s regulations and guidelines.

“Based on the Timetable and Schedule of Activities released by the Commission, the Anambra State Governorship election will take place on 6th November 2021. To this end, Political Parties that have indicated interest in nominating candidates for the election shall conduct their primaries for the nomination of candidates between 10th June and 1st July 2021,” the statement reads.


“The Commission, as part of its statutory oversight responsibilities, has written to all the political parties that indicated interest in conducting party primaries and sponsoring candidates for the election on their responsibilities and obligations.

“Political parties seeking to nominate candidates must hold direct or indirect primaries and the aspirant with the highest number of votes at the end of voting shall be declared the winner of the primaries and the aspirant’s name forwarded to the Commission as the candidate of the Party.

“For the avoidance of doubt, Sec. 4.5(1) and (2) of the INEC Regulations and Guidelines for the Conduct of Political Party primaries requires political parties holding direct primaries to make the list of their members available for inspection by monitors from the Commission as well as their aspirants and party members.


“For parties that opt for indirect primaries, the list of delegates must be made available to the Commission as well as aspirants at least 7 days before the conduct of primaries.

“Similarly, Sec. 9(1) and (2) of the same Regulations and Guidelines require political parties to make available to the Commission the list of aspirants seeking nomination to contest for elective offices as well as the list of members of the election committee of the party conducting the primaries.”

Fact check: Governor Kayode Fayemi never said Buhari’s advisers on Twitter ban “enemies of government”

0

An online news platform, not NewsWireNGR, DailyPost, early Saturday, reported that the Chairman, Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF), Kayode Fayemi, had criticised President Muhammadu Buhari over the suspension of the micro-blogging website, Twitter.

The story claimed that, the Ekiti State Governor described whoever advised President Buhari to take the step as his biggest enemy but NewsWireNGR fact-check reveals that the Governor has not commented on the ban that took effect early Saturday as at the time of filling this story.

The Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed had announced the suspension of Twitter in Nigeria cited the persistent use of the platform for activities that are capable of undermining Nigeria’s corporate existence.

The statement also noted that the federal government had directed the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) to immediately commence the process of licensing all over-the-top media service and social media operations in Nigeria.

The decision comes shortly after the platform had deleted President Buhari’s incident tweet that it said violated its policies.

But the statement being credited to Governor Fayemi was tweeted by Femi Fani Kayode, Nigeria’s former Aviation Minister who stated that the suspension of Twitter in Nigeria space is not justifiable by argument after the micro-blogging site removed a dangerous, irresponsible and insensitive tweet by the President. NewsWireNGR checks on Governor Fayemi’s twitter reveals the Governor tweeted last on the 28 day of May 2021.

Fani Kayode on his verified Twitter account berated the federal government on the development and defined the action as an “indefensible move”.

He tweeted, “Suspending @Twitter from Nigeria simply because they removed a dangerous, irresponsible & insensitive tweet by @MBuhari is the most absurd and counterproductive move that the FG could have made.

“Whoever advised Mr President to make this indefensible move is his biggest enemy,” he said.

Telecommunication companies deactivate twitter in Nigeria after government ban

0

Nigerians have opted for the use of Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) to circumvent the suspension of Twitter by the Federal Government.

On Friday, Lai Mohammed, Minister of Information, announced the suspension of the social media platform’s operation in Nigeria.

Information Minister Lai Mohammed said the government had acted because of “the persistent use of the platform for activities that are capable of undermining Nigeria’s corporate existence”.

The ban was subsequently followed by telecom operators in the country who deactivated twitter on their networks by 12 midnight in Nigeria.

This may not be unconnected with the decision of government to ban activities of twitter in the country following the deletion of President Muhammadu Buhari’s tweet, which the microblogging site deemed offensive.

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari posted a message to his account on Tuesday which threatened an ethnic group in the southeast of the country.

Twitter deleted the post on Wednesday, saying it was abusive – and the Nigerian government announced the impending ban of the website on Friday.

The full tweet from President Buhari said: “Many of those misbehaving today are too young to be aware of the destruction and loss of lives that occurred during the Nigerian Civil War.

“Those of us in the fields for 30 months, who went through the war, will treat them in the language they understand.”

NewsWireNGR checks reveals as at the early hours of Saturday, Twitter’s website was inaccessible in Nigeria on some mobile carriers, while its app and website worked on others.

Reactions as the twitter ban takes effect in Nigeria.

https://twitter.com/VeepaImer/status/1400963973269295106