Nigerians Blasts President Buhari, Lai Mohammed Over Hate Speech Fine Hike

Lai Mohammed and President Muhammadu Buhari

The Nigerian Bar Association, senior lawyers and human rights groups on Tuesday took a swipe at the Federal Government for raising the fine for hate speech from N500,000 to N5m.

The NBA and others, in separate interviews with Punch, said the hike was an attempt to stifle the media and kill free speech through an unconstitutional means.

The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, while unveiling the reviewed Nigeria Broadcasting Code earlier on Tuesday in Lagos, disclosed that the fine for hate speech had been increased to N5m.

Justifying the decision, Mohammed said, “We remain unperturbed, because we are acting in the national interest. The broadcasting code is not a static document. As we often say, broadcasting is dynamic. Therefore, even the sixth edition of the code shall be reviewed at the appropriate time.”

He stated that the new code included,“the provision raising the fine for hate speech from N500,000 to N5m.”

Mohammed said the amendments were necessitated by a presidential directive for an inquiry into the regulatory role of the National Broadcasting Commission and conduct of broadcast stations before, during and after the elections.

The minister said the recommendations were approved by the President Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), to reposition the NBC to perform its regulatory role better, mostly in the areas of political broadcasting, local content, coverage of emergencies, advertising, and anti-competitive behaviour.

He noted that the reviewed code also had provisions on exclusivity and monopoly, prohibiting exclusive use of rights by broadcasters who intended to create monopolies.

The minister said this would boost local content and encourage open access to premium content. He explained that sub-licensing and rights sharing created opportunities for local operators to also gain traction and raise revenue for their services.

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Mohammed also noted the law prohibiting backlog of advertising debts would promote sustainability for the station owners and producers of content. Recall that a senator from Niger State, Sabi Abdullahi, last year presented a bill seeking death penalty for hate speech.

But following criticisms by Nigerians, the senator said he would amend the bill to remove death penalty as the maximum punishment for hate speech. The bill, which passed the first reading in November 12, 2019, has yet to progress to the second reading.

But the Minister of State (Transportation), Gbemi Saraki, in an interview with state House correspondents after the Federal Executive Council meeting in November 2019, said hate speech bill was already captured in the country’s cybercrime law.

Nine months after the controversy generated by the hate speech bill died down, the NBA, two SANs and human rights groups on Tuesday faulted the Federal Government for hiking the fine for it.

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