07/06/2021
On the Permanent Ban or Temporary Suspension of Twitter
We must or should appreciate 3 very fundamental issues:
1. There is something innately immoral about a government that uses a tool to come to power and bans the use of that tool because of the damage others are doing to its carefully curated propagandised image of itself;
2. There is something illegal about threatening to arrest and detain your citizens in the absence of a clear law allowing you to do so in response to the use of an internet tool and with the existence of a law (the Constitution) that prohibits you from even conceiving the idea of punishment without crime;
3. While we may not agree on the exact figures actually or potentially lost with respect to the ban of Twitter, we all agree that Twitter is a veritable tool for business. All news media and serious international businesses are ALL on Twitter. Banning its use will DEFINITELY affect the profit margins of businesses in Nigeria, and by extension, taxes.
Finally, if a government has vowed to lift 20 or whatever million people out of poverty, banning the use of social media should be least idea to be used in achieving that.
Eleazar Nwadiugwu is a lawyer and writes from Lagos