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‎8 Arrested For Spreading Misinformation

by Torkuma Gbor
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Nigerian authorities have arrested at least eight people in recent weeks for spreading false information on social media, as officials threaten tougher penalties following a wave of misinformation linked to a recent school kidnapping.

‎The abductions occurred in Nigeria’s southwest on May 15.

‎Gunmen abducted at least 46 pupils and staff in a raid on three schools in Oyo state, in what the army called a terrorist attack.

‎A month later, with the pupils still in captivity, false claims about the headline-dominating incident have found foothold on social media. One false claim said an abducted student had been killed.

‎Fifteen ‘misleading’ publications

‎”The command has responded to not less than 15 misleading publications,” Oyo police spokesperson Olushola Alayande told AFP.

‎”A recurring pattern involves the circulation of sensational claims, recycled videos from unrelated incidents and speculative narratives presented as facts,” he said.

‎Misinformation itself has also turned deadly.

‎In Lagos, the economic capital, a 24-year-old motorcyclist was killed by a mob after a false claim circulated that bandits were invading the city. Fifteen people have been arrested in connection with the incident.

‎President also targeted with misinformation

‎Nigerian President Bola Tinubu, who is seeking a second term in the January election, has repeatedly been the subject of fabricated content.

‎Analysts say that the approaching elections have incentivised people to amplify and distort information.

‎The military had to push back recently on an AI-generated video, posted to Facebook, purporting to show defence chief Olufemi Oluyede admitting to having run out of ideas to tackle insecurity.

‎Many of the arrests have been made under Nigeria’s Cybercrimes Act, which criminalises sharing false information on social media and prescribes a three-year jail term or a fine of seven million naira (about $5,000).


‎SOURCE:AFP

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