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June 17, 2021 Nigeria Wants Broadcasting Act Amended to Regulate Social Media

Nigeria Wants Broadcasting Act Amended to Regulate Social Media

The Nigerian government is taking steps to further stifle the country’s civic space with its Minister of information and Culture, Lai Mohammed asking members of parliament to include internet broadcasting under the control of the Nigerian Broadcasting Commission (NBC).

Mr Mohammed made the position of the federal government known in his submission during a public hearing on a bill to amend the NBC Act. The public hearing was organised by the House of Representatives.

Should the Nigerian parliament pass the bill with the recommendations of the minister, online broadcasting organisations in the country will have to get approval from the NBC before operating. They will also be mandated to act within the control of the Nigerian State.

According to the minister, all online and internet broadcasting entities should be included in section two (c) of the bill.

Section two (b) of the NBC act states: “(1) The Commission shall have [the] responsibility of: Receiving, processing and considering applications for the establishment, ownership or operation of radio and television stations including (i) cable television services, direct satellite broadcast and any other medium of broadcasting.”

The minister said, “I want to add here specifically that internet broadcasting and all online media should be included in this because we have a responsibility to monitor contents, including Twitter.”

Also at the public hearing were media stakeholders who kicked against the move. They were of the view that the minister’s submissions will be injurious to the civics space, freedom of expression and media freedom in Nigeria.

“The inclusion of the following among categories of broadcasting services licences will be injurious to the civics space, freedom of expression and media freedom in Nigeria,” Akin Akingbulu, the Executive Director of the Institute for Media and Society, said at the public hearing.

“The power to give directives to the commission, vested in the minister of information in section six should be removed and replaced with powers which include policy formulation for the broadcasting sector, the negotiation of international agreements, notification of the policy direction of government and ensuring that the independence of the commission is protected at all times,” he added.

The International Press Centre (IPC) and the Centre for Media Law and Advocacy in a joint statement said the NBC should be truly independent and not be seen as an offshoot of the information ministry.

“The conduct of the NBC has over time presented it as an extension of the minister of information and culture which rarely acts independently,” Executive Director of IPC, Lanre Arogundade said while presenting the statement on behalf of the groups.

This move by the Nigerian government comes barely two weeks after it announced the ban of Twitter, a few days after the microblogging site removed a tweet by President Muhammadu Buhari for breaching its rules.

President Buhari’s administration has since then been exploring several avenues to regulate the media and especially social media.

The federal government has also announced that all social media companies must also be registered with the government to operate in Nigeria.

 

June 7, 2021 FG Directs Radio, TV Stations To De-Install Their Twitter Accounts

FG Directs Radio, TV Stations To De-Install Their Twitter Accounts

Following the event of The Federal republic of Nigeria placing a ban on the use of twitter in Nigeria, NBC has followed suit and ordered all broadcasting stations to de-install the use of twitter to pass any form of message across to the public.

This was issued in statement by its Director General Armstrong Idachaba, the NBC includes that in compliance to the Twitter suspension directive from the Federal Ministry of Information, "broadcasting stations are hereby advised to de-install Twitter handles and desist from using Twitter as a source (UGC) of information gathering for news and programmes presentation especially phone-in."

The regulator adds that it would be unpatriotic for any broadcaster to continue to patronize Twitter at this time and warns that "strict compliance is enjoined."

After one of President Muhammadu Buhari's tweets was deleted for violation of platform rules, The federal government went ahead to suspend Twitter in Nigeria on June 4, 2021 and twitter has ever since been inaccessible.

February 27, 2021 Twitter Reacts As NBC Bans Ric Hassani’s Song, ‘Thunder Fire You’

Twitter Reacts As NBC Bans Ric Hassani’s Song, ‘Thunder Fire You’

On February 26, 2021, moments after releasing his album, 'The Prince I Became,' Nigerian singer, Ric Hassani announced that the Nigerian Broadcasting Commission (NBC) had banned his single, 'Thunder Fire You' from Nigerian airwaves.

The breakup song, made out of spite and towards a fictional cheating partner and her friends was simply a work of art. Instead, it's been banned from airwaves, for infringing on the laws against strong language. In the past,  NBC has banned 2Baba's 2008 smash hit, 'Enter The Place.'

The ban has since turned promo for the song as sympathizers have flocked to streaming platforms to check the song out.

 
 
 

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