The Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, made this known after appearing before the House Committee on Information, National Orientation, Ethics, and Values to to defend the 2021 budget proposed by his ministry.
The Federal
Government has warned that Nigeria is sitting on a keg of gunpowder if the
issue of fake news is not urgently addressed, insisting on the regulation of
social media in the country.
The House of
Representatives has, however, warned against clamping down on free speech and
press freedom.
The minister,
while responding to questions from members of the committee, noted that the
next war to be fought in the country and across the world might be fought the
social media, making reference to the ongoing #EndSARS protests.
Mohammed
stated that the government was not seeking to shut down social media space in
the country because “the social media has come to stay.”
He, however,
stressed the need to have a policy that regulates social media and check fake
news and misinformation.
He said, “The
biggest challenge facing Nigeria today is fake news and misinformation. Based
on that, we dedicated an entire National Council on Information’s 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. We kept saying that if we don’t regulate social media, it will
destroy us. Social media and fake news will not destroy Nigeria.

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