The Senate had passed into Second
Reading a bill seeking two years imprisonment with an option of N2 million fine
or both for any Nigerian who posts “abusive statements” on the social media.
Senator Dino Melaye, coming through
a point of order during plenary, expressed dissatisfaction with the abuse of
the social media by some online publishers whom he said sold their
“conscience”.
Melaye, who specifically mentioned
prominent online platform, Sahara Reporters, said others in the online news
business are in the habit of fair reportage.
He said Sahara Reporters is known
for outright falsehood.
He added that Sahara Reporters
operates from New York in the United States of America and the Nigerian Government
should write the US Government on the platform’s penchant for misinformation.
Contributing to the point of order,
Senator Abiodun Olujimi said the amount of falsehood flying everywhere is
staggering and a scapegoat has to be made as deterrent for others.
Olujimi revealed that she had to
exit all social media platforms because of the continued lies and falsehood
peddled around.
In his remarks, the President of the
Senate, Dr. Abubakar Bukola Saraki, said the online media remains a major
addition to the democratic discourse, but it should not be abused.
Saraki said they should be fair and
accurate in their approach to stories and that people must be held responsible
for their actions.
He referred the matter to the Senate
Committees on Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions; ICT and Cybercrime; and
Judiciary and Human Rights.
The bill, which was sponsored by the
Deputy Leader of the Senate, Senator Bala Ibn Na’Allah, is seeking to provide
punishment for frivolous petitions by making sure that only credible and
verifiable petitions are presented for public use.
According to the bill, any person
who through text messages, tweets, WhatsApp any other social media posts any
abusive statement knowing same to be false with intent to set the public
against any person and/or group of persons, an institution of government or such
other bodies established by law shall be guilty of an offence and upon
conviction shall be liable to an imprisonment for two years or a fine of N2
million or both such fine and imprisonment.
Section 3 of the seeming draconian
Bill also reads: “Where any person in order to circumvent this law makes any
allegation and or publish any statement, petition in any paper, radio, or any
medium of whatever description, with malicious intent to discredit or set the
public against any person or group of persons, institutions of Government, he
shall be guilty of an offence and upon conviction shall be liable to an
imprisonment term of two years or a fine of N4 million.”
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