EndSARS Saga: Citing China, Buhari Moves To Regulate Social Media. But Reps Are Disagreeing

Apparently jolted by the EndSARS uprising that ruptured the relative peace in a shaking Nigeria, the Buhari administration seems to be bent on courting another trouble in the country.

The administration is making a seeming desperate move to regulate social media, claiming that the country is sitting on a keg of gunpowder if the issue of fake news is not urgently addressed.

The Buhari administration is insisting on regulating social media in the country.

But, the House of Representatives Committee on Information, National Orientation, Ethics and Values, does not appear to be travelling with the administration on its regulation bid. The House committee is warning against clamping down on free speech and press freedom.

President Muhammadu Buhari’s Information and Culture Minister, Lai Mohammed, while appearing before the House panel to defend the 2021 budget proposed by his ministry, notes that the next war to be fought in the country and across the world might be the social media.

Mohammed claims the biggest challenge facing troubled Nigeria is fake news and misinformation, warning that the next war that will be fought in the country and across the globe may be in social media. He cited the recent EndSARS protests, saying that it was fought on social media.

‘’’They mobilised using the social media. The war today revolves around two things. Smartphones and data and these young men don’t even watch television or listen to the radio or read newspapers. We are sitting on a time bomb on this issue of fake news.

“Unfortunately, we have no national policy on social media, and we need one. When we went to China, we could not get Google, Facebook and Instagram. You could not even use your email in China because they made sure it is censored and well regulated”, the minister said.

Continuing, while explaining that the Buhari administration was not seeking to shut down the social media because it has come to stay, the minister adds that the country should have a social media policy that regulates social media and check fake news and misinformation.

According to him, ‘’the biggest challenge facing Nigeria today is fake news and misinformation. Based on that, we dedicated an entire National Council on Information meeting to that issue after which we launched a national campaign against fake news in July 2018. We said then that the next war will be fought without a shot being fired, but with the use of fake news. We didn’t stop there.

“We went on a tour of all media houses to solicit their support in the fight against fake news. We launched the campaign to regulate social media which was bitterly contested by the stakeholders.”

He further argued that if the social media is not regulated, it will destroy the country, expressing the hope that social media and fake news would not destroy Nigeria, pointing out that in 2017, there was a fake video of the herdsmen and farmers’ crisis, pointing out that it was a video of what happened in Tanzania that was played in Nigeria as if it was true.

Mohammed told the federal legislators: “In 2017, a very popular entertainer in Nigeria raised the false alarm that students of the College of Education, Gidan Waya in Kaduna State had been murdered. There was an almost reprisal only for him to find out that it was not true.

“In the same 2017, we found out that some of the videos being posted are things that happened in other parts of the world. When there was a problem between South Africa and Nigeria, they were posting videos of what happened in India and Tanzania to suggest that Nigerians were being roasted alive. That was what led to the reprisals in the malls.”

He said the government has continued to draw attention that this is a menace, pointing out, however, fake news is a worldwide phenomenon.

“The University of Ohio conducted a research and discovered that Hillary Clinton lost the presidential election to Trump because of fake news which was promoted by Russia and they worked on three issues.

‘’First was that Trump had been endorsed by the Pope. The second was that when she was secretary of state, she authorised the sale of arms and also that she was a very old person. These three things did a lot to sway the votes”, he says.

He said in June, there was a riot in Ethiopia when a popular musician was killed, the government shut down social media for two days to bring that riot under control, pointing out that this occurred around the time Ethiopia hosted the AU.

“But the truth is that the only way to do it was to shut down social media. We need technology and resources to dominate our social media. We need a social media policy to determine what can be seen and what cannot be seen.

“You will be shocked that when you start arguing with your children, they will be quoting social media. So, we need a social media policy in Nigeria and we need to empower the various agencies and we need technology to be able to regulate social media.’’

Warning against any attempt to shut down the social media, a member of the House committee, Emmanuel Oghene, says the action will be counter-productive and will lead the youths to believe that there is an attempt to truncate democracy.

Oghene said it was wrong to always look at the negative sides of the social media at all times without mentioning the good side.

”Talking about the recent looting of COVID-19 items, in some places they will be looting, but nobody will know. The government will not know and the police will not know. But because of social media, people will be posting as it is happening and the government will be able to go there and save lives.

“There was a time when some boys were digging the road and because of social media, this information came out and the situation was arrested. If there are no social media that will not happen”, he says.

The blunt federal legislator pointed out that China is not a good example because it is a communist country, while Nigeria has always been a free democratic country.

Chairman of the committee, Odebunmi Olusegun, says the Buhari administration should search for the technology to regulate the social media and be able to work with what is already available in cyberspace.

”I don’t want the media to misquote us. Social media has come to stay. What the government should do is to look for technology that will work together with what is in the space. We are not asking the government to stop social media.

‘’The most important thing is that government should go and look for the technology to regulate so that you can equally be working within the space”, the panel chairman says.

 

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