Twitter ban: SERAP Sues Buhari Over
The
Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) and 176 concerned
Nigerians have filed a lawsuit against the regime of the President, Major
General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), at the ECOWAS Community Court of Justice in
Abuja over the government’s suspension of microblogging platform, Twitter.
The suit No
ECW/CCJ/APP/23/21 was filed on Tuesday by Solicitor to SERAP and human rights
activist, Femi Falana, SAN.
SERAP also
argued that the “suspension of Twitter is aimed at intimidating and stopping
Nigerians from using Twitter and other social media platforms to assess
government policies, expose corruption, and criticize acts of official impunity
by the agents of the Federal Government.”
In the suit,
SERAP and the concerned Nigerians sought, “An order of interim injunction restraining
the Federal Government from implementing its suspension of Twitter in Nigeria,
and subjecting anyone including media houses, broadcast stations using Twitter
in Nigeria, to harassment, intimidation, arrest and criminal prosecution,
pending the hearing and determination of the substantive suit.”
They also avert
that “if this application is not urgently granted, the Federal Government will
continue to arbitrarily suspend Twitter and threaten to impose criminal and
other sanctions on Nigerians, telecommunication companies, media houses,
broadcast stations and other people using Twitter in Nigeria, the perpetual
order sought in this suit might be rendered nugatory.”
Last week,
the regime of the President suspended Twitter operations in the country citing
the “persistent use of the platform for activities that are capable of
undermining Nigeria’s corporate existence”.
The Buhari
regime has since come under fire for what many termed as a restriction of the
right of expression. The international community including the European Union,
the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, amongst others have since
knocked the Buhari regime for the action but the Federal Government has been
unyielding in its stance insisting that the sovereignty of the West African
nation must be respected by the tech giant in San Francisco.
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