News
Twitter Ban: FG Took Away the Food, Took Away the Plate
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By Joel Popoola
It was the story of Ogechi Egemonu that really brought home to me the unintended consequences of President Buhari’s Twitter ban.
Like so many the businesses owners in Nigeria, she used to use digital media to reach customers, engage stakeholders and advertise her products. Powered by social media marketing, the entrepreneur’s fashion business used to turnover 500,000 Naira a week.
She is now making next to nothing. “I rely on Twitter for my livelihood” she told Reuters.
Ogechi’s plight puts a human face on the economic collateral damage that makes the Twitter ban unsustainable.
Twitter is where Nigerian businesses advertise and promote themselves.
Twitter is where Nigerian employers advertise job opportunities.
Twitter is where Nigerian start-ups attract investment.
The government may have accused Twitter of “undermining Nigeria’s corporate existence” but this ban is undermining the existence of Nigerian corporations.
As influencer and marketing expert, Alex Oluwatobi has written:
“In Nigeria, Twitter is… our crowd funding community, e-commerce platform, our fact checker and the main CRM tool for most companies. It is some people’s source of livelihood. If the government can’t give Nigerians food, they shouldn’t take our plate”.
Estimates say that Nigeria loses $6m for every day Twitter remains banned – slowing commerce, reducing productivity and ultimately costing jobs. There’s even an argument that the widespread use of VPN’s to get around the ban is slowing down the entire internet!
But the long term is where the real danger lies. The Twitter ban is likely to harm Nigeria’s ability to attract investment to a flourishing digital economy the government has itself recognised as being critical to our national future.
Just last year the government called for foreign investors to support our technology ecosystem – do you think that investors are likely to put their money in a market where the threat of sudden regulatory disruption is always present?
Just look at the decision of Twitter itself to choose Ghana over Nigeria as it’s African base- even though it has more users in Nigerian then there are people in Ghana.
Its statement described Ghana “as a champion for democracy, a supporter of free speech, online freedom, and the Open Internet”.
It’s those sort of nations where investors want to be associated with, and where they feel safe putting their money.
And right now, we look nothing like that. This ban is likely to keep investors away. Global tech companies looking to establish a presence in Africa or invest in our indigenous start-ups with look elsewhere – in particular Ghana, South Africa or Kenya.
In the twenty-first century the both civil society and the global economy will become more and more dependent on individual connections between people made possible by digital technology
That’s why the digital democracy campaign I lead created Rate Your Leader, a free app connecting people and politics.
Rate Your Leader allows users to identify local leaders and to connect directly with them – raising issues and concerns person to person, and allowing communities to collaborate to make local areas better and helping politicians understand what matters most to the people who elect them.
It also aids accessibility. At a time when the government has shut down an important channel of communication between electors and elected Rate Your Leader allows people to put questions directly to local leaders. Rate Your Leader also lets local people rate politicians for accessibility, transparency and honesty – building trust in both politicians and political institutions.
And we need to build bridges, not walls – especially between generations. The government has recognized the need for our economy to diversify. Nigerian youth have risen to the challenge by self-teaching themselves Java, PHP, and Javascript, with data from Google indicating that 32% of Nigerian IT professionals are self-taught. As a result, global consulting giants Accenture recently projected that Nigeria will be Africa’s largest internet-based economy come 2025.
Now that generation finds a government prepared to deliberately damage Nigeria’s digital economy – as well as removing access to a platform that 18% of them use to look for work at a time when youth employment is running at 45%.
There is no question that the Twitter ban is unconstitutional. But the government must realise- and fast – that it is also economically unsustainable.
Joel Popoola is a Nigerian tech entrepreneur, digital democracy campaigner and founder of the Rate Your Leader app. He can be reached via @JOPopoola
News
INEC Denies Granting Nafiu Bala Access to Nomination Portal
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has dismissed as false claims circulating in the media by a factional leader of the African Democratic Congress (ADC), Nafiu Bala, that he had obtained the commission’s access code and uploaded the party’s candidates for the 2027 general election.
The claim, which has been widely shared on social media, suggested that Bala’s faction had successfully completed the upload of candidates on INEC’s nomination portal.
However, when contacted by Daily Trust, INEC’s Director of Voter Education and Publicity, Mrs Victoria Eta-Messi, described the claim as untrue, insisting that Bala is not recognised by the commission as the national chairman of the ADC.
“It is not true,” she said.
A further check by Daily Trust on INEC’s official political parties portal also contradicted Bala’s claim.
The commission’s portal lists Sen. David Mark as the National Chairman of the ADC and Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola as the National Secretary, indicating that they remain the party officials recognised by INEC for the purpose of nominations and other statutory dealings.
The development comes amid the protracted leadership crisis within the ADC, with rival factions laying claim to the party’s national leadership ahead of the 2027 general election.
The controversy has intensified following reports by Bala’s faction that it had secured INEC’s access code and uploaded candidates, a claim now firmly denied by the electoral commission.
News
Appeal Court Ruling Not Setback, ADC Assures Members, Supporters
The African Democratic Congress (ADC) has assured its members and supporters nationwide that the recent Court of Appeal judgment on the party’s congresses will not affect its primary elections or the candidates who emerged from the processes.
In a statement issued on Monday by the party’s National Publicity Secretary, Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi, the ADC said the judgment only relates to the election of its ward, local government and state executive committees and has no impact on the direct primaries conducted by the party.
“The African Democratic Congress (ADC) notes the judgment delivered by the Court of Appeal in Abuja on Monday in a matter relating to party congresses for the election of ward, local government and state executive committees of the party,” the statement read.
The party stressed that the ruling does not invalidate the emergence of its candidates at any level.
“We wish to assure members of the party and the general public that this judgment has no effect whatsoever on the direct primaries through which the party’s candidates have emerged at all levels,” it said.
The ADC also disclosed that it had begun the process of challenging the judgment at a higher court, insisting that it disagrees with the decision.
“The party has already commenced the process of appealing the judgment, which we respectfully disagree with and consider to be legally unsustainable,” the statement added.
The party further said it took note of the dissenting judgment delivered by the presiding justice, describing it as more consistent with its position and the law.
“We also note the dissenting judgment of the presiding Justice, which, in our view, more accurately reflects the settled position of the law and the party’s position,” it stated.
The ADC appealed to its members and supporters across the country to remain calm and focused despite the court ruling.
“We urge all party members and the millions of our supporters to remain calm, confident and focused,” the statement said.
The party said it would continue to pursue its goal of offering Nigerians a credible alternative through constitutional and lawful means.
“The African Democratic Congress remains committed to the task of providing Nigerians with a credible alternative and will continue to pursue that mission in accordance with the Constitution and the rule of law,” the statement added.
News
Hike in WAEC, NECO Fees Cruel, Dangerous to Education, Atiku Tells Tinubu
Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has condemned the Federal Government’s continued escalation of the cost of public education, describing the recent increase in fees for Federal Unity Colleges and the reported approval of a uniform ₦50,000 examination fee for West African Examinations Council WAEC and National Examinations Council NECO candidates from 2027 as cruel.
In a statement issued by his Senior Special Assistant on Public Communication, Phrank Shaibu, on Sunday, Atiku noted that education remains the greatest instrument of social mobility and the surest pathway out of poverty for millions of children from humble backgrounds, adding that every additional financial burden imposed on parents translates into another child being denied the opportunity to learn, dream and contribute meaningfully to society.
“Nigeria already bears the painful distinction of having one of the largest populations of out-of-school children in the world. Depending on the methodology and age group measured, between 10.5 million and about 15 million Nigerian children and young people are already outside the classroom. Any government confronted with such a national emergency should be investing aggressively to bring these children back into school. Instead, this administration is choosing policies that will inevitably swell those numbers,” he said.
He warned that increasing fees in Federal Unity Colleges while imposing significantly higher costs on WAEC and NECO examinations would disproportionately affect children from poor and middle-income families, whose parents are already making impossible choices between food, healthcare, transportation, and education.
“The same administration whose policies are progressively narrowing access to public tertiary education continues to project the Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND) as one of its flagship achievements. Yet a university loan offers little comfort to a child who has already been priced out of secondary education or cannot afford the qualifying examination required for admission. A government cannot credibly claim to be expanding access to higher education while simultaneously erecting financial barriers that prevent millions of young Nigerians from ever reaching the university gates.
“Genuine educational reform begins by making education affordable from the primary and secondary levels, expanding the carrying capacity of our tertiary institutions, and ensuring that poverty never becomes the reason a child is denied the opportunity to learn. A government that truly believes in education invests in classrooms before it invests in loans.
“No nation has ever taxed its way into educational excellence. Countries that aspire to economic greatness invest more—not less—in education during difficult times because they understand that human capital is the engine of sustainable development. Nigeria cannot build a globally competitive economy while systematically pricing millions of its children out of classrooms”, he added.
Atiku therefore called on President Tinubu to immediately reverse the increase in Unity School fees and the proposed ₦50,000 WAEC and NECO examination fee, and convene an urgent stakeholders’ dialogue on sustainable financing for public education.
“By the grace of Almighty God, I remain confident that Nigerians will reject policies that punish their children and make education the exclusive preserve of those who can afford it. The African Democratic Congress is committed to restoring education as a public good, not a privilege.
“An ADC-led government will not permit this unjust and punitive increase in examination fees. Instead, we shall reverse policies that place education beyond the reach of ordinary families, expand access to quality education at every level, increase the carrying capacity of our tertiary institutions, and ensure that every Nigerian child, regardless of background, has a fair opportunity to learn, excel and fulfil his or her God-given potential,” he added.
The Vanguard






