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Nigeria s Twitter Ban Provokes Outcry – Channels Television

Channels Television   Updated June 11, 2021 In this file photo illustration, a Twitter logo is displayed on a mobile phone on May 27, 2020, in Arlington, Virginia. Olivier DOULIERY / AFP   Nigeria’s media and activists fear their country is slipping into repression after the government suspended Twitter in Africa’s most populous nation, where hyper-connected youth embraced the platform as a means of protest. The decision on Friday, days after Twitter deleted a remark from President Muhammadu Buhari, has already provoked international outcry over freedom of expression and calls for protests online and on the street. “It is very important we push back and fast, because they could go further,” said a social media executive at a major TV station who asked to remain anonymous.

Return to dictatorship? Outcry over Nigeria Twitter ban

Nigeria s Twitter ban provokes outcry | Borneo Bulletin Online

Nigeria s Twitter ban provokes outcry | Borneo Bulletin Online
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Nigeria s Twitter ban provokes outcry

Nigeria's media and activists fear their country is slipping into repression after the government suspended Twitter in Africa's most populous nation, where hyper-connected youth embraced the platform as a means of protest. The decision on Friday, days after Twitter deleted a remark from President Muhammadu Buhari, has already provoked international outcry over freedom of expression and calls for protests online and on the street. "It is very.

Breaking News | Nigeria s Twitter Ban Provokes Outcry

Twitter PHOTO: AFP Nigeria’s media and activists fear their country is slipping into repression after the government suspended Twitter in Africa’s most populous nation, where hyper-connected youth embraced the platform as a means of protest. The decision on Friday, days after Twitter deleted a remark from President Muhammadu Buhari, has already provoked international outcry over freedom of expression and calls for protests online and on the street. “It is very important we push back and fast, because they could go further,” said a social media executive at a major TV station who asked to remain anonymous. More than 120 million Nigerians have access to the internet, and nearly 40 million of them have a Twitter account 20 percent of the population, according to Lagos-based researcher NOI Polls.

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