A call to regulate social media in Nigeria

A call to regulate social media in Nigeria



Nigeria today faces a silent but growing threat not from external enemies, but from within the ungoverned and unregulated spaces of our social media
platforms. What was once a medium for expression, education, innovation, and national conversation has become a breeding ground for misinformation, reckless commentary, and moral disorder.

Every day, countless falsehoods are circulated online, destroying reputations, misleading the general public, and sowing distrust in government institutions. The most troubling part is that much of these contents are produced and shared by our own youths, often without
thought or verification. This has created a digital environment where truth struggles to survive, patriotism is mocked, and cynicism flourishes unchecked, calling for concern hence, the need to address this menace.

Freedom of expression is a constitutional right, but freedom without responsibility is a recipe for national decay and melancholy. The federal
government, the National Assembly, and all patriotic Nigerians must therefore recognise the urgent need to regulate and sanitise our social media space not to silence citizens, but to protect the integrity of our public
discourse, national unity and continuous existence as a country. Those who live in glass houses don’t throw stones; a man with rotten teeth must chew with caution.

A Framework for Responsible Regulation:
Establishment of a National Social Media Ethics and Regulatory Commission (NSMERC). This body should be empowered to monitor, investigate, and address
the spread of false information, fake news, cyber-bullying, hate speech, and contents that undermine national security. Its focus must be on ethical standards, not political control.

Mandatory Verification of Accounts Mechanism:
Collaboration with major social media companies such as X (Twitter), Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube to ensure that all users in Nigeria undergo verified digital identification. This will discourage
anonymity, reduce fake accounts, and promote accountability.

Digital Responsibility Education and Awareness:
Introduce digital ethics and responsible communication into secondary and tertiary education curricular. Our youths must be taught that social media is not a lawless space, but a public trust where words have consequences so, maturity and responsibility must
be adhere to strictly.

Creation of a Real-Time Fact-Checking and Penalty System: A fine-based and temporary suspension mechanism for accounts or media handles that consistently share unverified or harmful
information. Repeat offenders should face permanent bans and legal consequences. Media bloggers must register for ease monitoring and identification and to enhance press freedom.

Public Information Verification Portal:
Establish an official online platform where citizens can fact-check trending news, social media posts, and viral claims before sharing.
This will empower the public to choose truth over traffic/ pedestrian news and patriotism over propaganda.

Partnership with Global Platforms:
Encourage major social media bloggers /contents creators to establish local content monitoring and compliance offices in Nigeria.
This ensures that harmful materials or inciting contents can be addressed swiftly and in alignment with Nigerian laws.
The Call for National Conscience

This call is not political. It is borne out of patriotism for our nation Nigeria. It has no political undertone, it is the burning desires for us to co-exist peacefully as one united nation.
A nation that allows the unregulated spread of misinformation is slowly poisoning its own unity and credibility. The time has come for all
responsible citizens, especially the youthful age, to recognise that digital
freedom carries moral duty.
Nigeria cannot afford to be a country where rumours shape reality, where insults replace ideas, or where patriotism is drowned in noise. We must
collectively rescue our digital space and restore a culture of truth, respect, and national responsibility.

In a nutshell and my candid advice is that the federal government must act firmly but fairly. The National Assembly must deliberate not with fear of
criticism, but with faith in the future. And every patriotic Nigerian must join this call not for censorship, but for responsibility, truth, and national cohesion.
Social media must not continue to be an instrument of destruction. It must be reclaimed as a tool for enlightenment, unity, and progress.
May Nigeria triumph over misinformation and rise again as a nation of wisdom, truth, and dignity.



Source: Blueprint

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