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Nigerian Government Moves To Control Digital Media After #Twitterban

Lai Mohammed, Nigerian Minister of Information and Culture proposed that the NBC Act be amended to allow the NBC to regulate digital media in Nigeria.

The Nigerian government has requested the House of Representatives to amend an Act that will bring the regulation of online news portals and content providers under the authority of the Nigerian Broadcasting Commission (NBC) in its latest move to regulate digital media.

According to a PREMIUM TIMES report, Lai Mohammed, the Minister of Information and Culture, on Wednesday, June 16,  made the request at a hearing to amend the NBC Act led by the House Committee on Information, Ethics, and Values.

Mohammed said all digital media  entities and news should be included in section two (c) of the bill that proposes to give NBC the powers to “receive, process and consider applications for the establishment, ownership of radio and television stations including…”

If passed, the bill will make online broadcasters register with the NBC before operation as well as act according to the dictates of the regulatory body.


The minister’s submission comes after the government’s suspension of operations of Twitter in the country.

The government on June 4, 2021, ordered all social media companies and online broadcasters to get a government license before they can operate in Nigeria, following its ban on Twitter operations in the country.

The ban came a few days after Twitter deleted a divisive tweet by Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari calling for military action against suspected separatists wreaking havoc in the Southeast.

International community and local activists have condemned the ban, saying it stifles freedom of expression and shrinks the Nigerian civic space.

Stifling Civic Space

Opposing the Minister’s submission during the hearing, Akin Akingbulu, Executive Director of the Institute of Media and Societies, said  the move by the government would further stifle the civic space.

“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,” Akingbulu said.

He said the NBC Act fails to provide for the independence of the NBC, PREMIUM TIMES reported.

He argued that the NBC would be turned into a political tool for repression since it is directly under the ministry of information.

“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,” Akingbulu said.

Presenting on behalf of the International Press Centre (IPC) and Centre for Media Law and Advocacy, Lanre Arogundade, the Executive Director of IPC, called for the independence of the NBC, saying its conduct  overtime “presents it as an extension of the office of the minister of information.” 


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Aishat Babatunde

Aishat Babatunde heads the digital reporting desk. Before joining HumAngle, she worked at Premium Times and Nigerian Tribune. She is a graduate of English from the University of Ibadan.

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