1/ On Tuesday last week, President Buhari tweeted that “many of those misbehaving today are too young to be aware of the destruction and loss of lives that occurred during the Nigerian Civil War...
2/ ...Those of us in the fields for 30 months, who went through the war, will treat them in the language they understand.” This Tweet with its reference to the civil war, was seen as a threat by many against the people of the South East and so they reported it.
3/ Threatening a genocide against a people is a violation of Jack’s Twitter and therefore , the president’s tweet was deleted. Two days later, President Buhari announced a ban on Twitter.
4/ The official reason given for the ban was not the deleted tweet but “the persistent use of the platform for activities that are capable of undermining Nigeria’s corporate existence.” Yeah, right.
5/ Ironically, the ban was announced on the official Twitter account of The Federal Ministry of Information and Culture. A couple of days later, Governor El Rufai re-tweeted an op-ed by a Serbian-American journalist, Nebojsa Malic,
6/ The op-ed praised Buhari for doing what Trump couldn’t (banning Twitter and “sending a clear message to San Francisco that this kind of behavior by Big Tech will not be tolerated.”
7/ Imagine using Twitter to praise a Twitter ban when the government that you are a part of has criminalized Twitter? No one can make this make sense.
8/ Anyway, to circumvent the ban and despite the government’s threat to prosecute violators, Nigerians have been downloading VPN and using it to access Twitter.
9/ According to topvpn.com, demand for firewall-circumventing apps jumped by 1,405 percent over the weekend following the announcement. Unfortunately, some public VPNs may pose a cyber risk.
10/ A Twitter user posted recently about his experience when he downloaded VPN so he could WhatsApp while in China. His bank card details were compromised and used by someone in Pakistan. Anyhow, all that is beside the point.
11/ The point is that a democratically elected president suspended Twitter because his questionable tweets were deleted. Regardless of what the official claim is, the timing of the ban suggests otherwise.
12/ A joint statement released last week by diplomatic missions of Canada, the European Union, the Republic of Ireland, Norway, the United Kingdom and the United States voiced their displeasure with the ban because it inhibits freedom of speech and access to information.
13/ I heard a panelist on Dream FM Enugu today refer to the ban as not just infringing on freedom of speech but on “freedom of thinking” as well because she- and many others- write their thoughts on Twitter.
14/ Apart from the freedom of speech infringement, one could argue that blocking access to Twitter in Nigeria would also affect (some) people’s livelihoods.
15/ In a country with rising unemployment- the 2021 unemployment rate , according to statista.com is expected to reach 32.6% - many young people especially, ‘sell their market on Twitter.’ They post, hoping that their clients are “on your TL.”
16/ For a long time, I used a tailor I found on Twitter. An inability to access this space means that these young entrepreneurs stand to lose some of their potential client base.
17/ Additionally, Nigerians use Twitter to access and share news and information. For some, like Emmanuel Alumona who was interviewed by Al Jazeera, Twitter is their main source of news. In Alumona’s own words, “Twitter is like my newspaper.
18/ Whenever I want to check what’s happening in the country, I refresh my timeline.” When people go missing, family members and friends use Twitter to beg for help. The criminal who raped and killed Miss Ini Umoren was ‘caught’ on Twitter.
19/ The SARS protest/revolution was organized on Twitter. Even the social media arm of the campaign that brought Buhari to power was run , arguably, mostly on Twitter. Furthermore, there are organizations that provide important services -like MentallyAwareNigeria
20/Their accessibility on Twitter makes a huge difference. Folks know to tag them when someone posts about harming or killing themselves. A few weeks ago, they helped avert a potential suicide when the young would-be victim posted his intentions on Twitter
21/ Democracies cannot limit citizen access to cyberspace because it is a public space like any other. Yet, there are ordinary citizens who support this ban (temporary or not). I do not agree with them.
22/ They argue that while Twitter is within their right to remove any tweet they deem harmful on their platform, they are not within their right to impose their views on a sovereign nation and not expect a blow back.
23/ Nigeria can blow back all it wants but what does this say about Naija as a serious country? Dr. Tolu Olarewaju published a brilliant piece on Conversation.UK about how the Twitter ban could harm technology investment. What does this suspension tell citizens?
24/ It says that this government isn’t fully committed to democracy. What’s the way forward? The only way forward is for Nigeria to remove the ban. Abi we are in a dictatorship?
25/ Let Nigerians in Naija have unimpeded access to Twitter even though, as a friend noted, a majority of Nigerians on social media channels do not use it. Now, if President Buhari had banned WhatsApp, he might have well had a riot on his hands. #KeepitOn
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
1/ On The Blindness of Privilege:
Pastor Paul Adefarasin of House on the Rock – a man whose net worth is estimated to be about $50 million (although he reportedly said a few years ago that he was a billionaire )- told his parishioners to make sure to have a plan B out of Naija
2/ because “these people are crazy.” His wife, he said, was busy sorting out their plan B. Ah! To be wealthy na good thing oo. Folks, the opposite of poverty isn’t wealth. It is access to a viable plan B. And the options that come with it.
3/ Friends, the opposite of poverty is privilege. And you know what they say about privilege being blind? If you have it and you don’t pay attention, you assume everyone else does and if they don’t, then it’s their fault.
1/ 3 weeks ago, I had a conversation with an overwhelmed new parent friend of mine. She said the baby cried a lot. My friend could catch no break. I asked for the baby's bedtime- baby had no bedtime. So, I shared parenting lessons (stuff tat worked for me with her)
2/ When we had #1, J was working full time, I was studying full time. My mom stayed with us from a few days to when #1 turned 3 months old. My mother-in-law told us from the beginning she could/would babysit BUT our baby had to have structure.
3/ bedtime was same time every day, whether he was at ours or his grandparents'. We put him down, drew the blinds, turned off the lights, left some music on. If he cried, we went in to see what was up, cuddle him ( without ever removing him from the room)
1/ In the late 90’s, my friend’s younger sister had an appendectomy at a hospital in either Nsukka or Enugu, I forget which. At some point during surgery, according to my friend, there was a power outage and the doctors wrapped up by flashlight.
2/ My friend’s sister survived and the story of her surgery by flashlight has become a dinner table anecdote. Some years ago, a woman I knew in Belgium returned to Nigeria to process the papers for her two children in Benin City to join her and her new husband in Europe.
3/ It was the beginning of summer. She had hoped to be done on time for the children to be in Belguim for the first day of school in September. On her last day in Nigeria, she was in a car accident and was heavily injured.
1/ This week, a video of five female students of Oreyo Senior Grammar School, Igbogbo Ikorodu, Lagos State, smoking shisha in what is presumably a private home went viral.
2/ In the video, the students are in school uniform, so they either sneaked out of school or they are day students who detoured after school to someone’s place for a hookah smoking session rather than return home.
3/ I read somewhere that the girls have been suspended. I've never been in favour of removing students from the classroom unless they are violent (and/or disruptive). Suspensions (and expulsions) are often not effective forms of punishment (a discussion for another day).
1/ So Jack of Twitter, carried his business to Ghana and the Giant of Africa is raking because how dare he leave Nigeria with all its resources; human and otherwise to go and land in Ghana where their jollof is rubbish?
2/ Thing is though, that no matter how many more Twitter users Naija has than Ghana (36 million, almost 4 million more than the entire population of Ghana) an argument I have heard more times than I care to count, Jack owes us nothing.
3/ He is free to set his headquarters wherever he thinks it makes good business or personal sense for him to do so. Maybe he just likes Ghana. Maybe he wants it in a place where he’s not having to invest in security details and power supply
‘The African Woman’ (For The ‘Real’ African Man) 1/ Never talk about African women as if they were individuals. Remember: they are a monolithic group. There is the African Woman of which there are two subgroups: the Bad African Woman (BAW) and the Good African Woman (GAW).
2/ Members of each group are easy to spot: The Bad African Woman is a feminist which means that she hates men and spends her days pretending to be happy and her nights crying in loneliness because she has put career before marriage.
3/ Note: it doesn’t matter whether she’s married or not, that’s beside the point. For her, always use adjectives like ‘bitter’, ‘frustrated’, ‘sad’.