The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, says the opposition is using fake news and hate speech as campaign tools to de-market President Muhammadu Buhari, ahead of the 2019 general elections.
The minister said this on Monday when he paid official visit to the Abuja office of The Authority Newspaper.“Buhari has indicated interest to contest the 2019 presidential election under the platform of his ruling party, All Progressives Congress (APC).
“The opposition has latched on to the use of fake news as a campaign tool ahead of the 2019 general elections.
“With the Buhari Administration delivering on its promises to fight corruption, build the nation’s economy and tackle insecurity, the opposition has realised it will not make any impact if it takes on the Administration on that turf.
“So, it has decided to take the easy route, which is to use fake news and hate speech to de-market the Administration, pitch Christians against
MuslimS and one ethnic group against another.
“In short, it wants to plunge the country into turmoil. It is said that the easy way is not always the right way.
“The opposition knows that but it doesn’t care. It is hell bent on dividing Nigerians along ethnic and religious lines,” he said.
The minister said the opposition had been using fake news to blame all the killings in a certain part of the country on herdsmen.
He said it ignored the band of deadly militia groups that were being sponsored by unscrupulous people to kill innocent people and put the nation on edge.
The minister stressed that the clashes between the farmers and herders were being aggravated by climate change which had heightened the contest for scarce natural resources like water.
“With a population of 45 million in 1960, Nigeria is today approaching the 200-million mark.
“Yet, the resources have not expanded and have in fact been shrinking.”
Mohammed said his visit to the newspaper began a media tour aimed at pushing the national campaign against fake news, launched on July 11, to sensitise Nigerians to the dangers posed by fake news.
He noted that though fake news was a global phenomenon, it however constitute danger to the peace and security of Nigeria’s nascent democracy and corporate existence.
“It is a time bomb. It has wreaked havoc in other lands. In 1994, over 800,000 people died in Rwanda due to a combination of fake news and hate speech.
“In India, about a dozen people have been killed after they were falsely accused in a message circulated on Whatsapp, of abducting children.
“The US is still reeling from the role that fake news played during the country’s last general elections.”
Mohammed said that fake news had aggravated the farmers/herders clashes in the country but that the Administration had put all necessary measures in place to stem the killings.
“In Zamfara, for example, you can see how the military has put the bandits on the run.
“In Benue, the police and the military are working hard and that has resulted in a drastic fall in the spate of killings.
“Sadly, the media has either downplayed nor ignored this. This government will not relent until every Nigerian can sleep with his or her two eyes closed.”
The minister called on Nigerians to be wary of the fake news being deliberately pushed, especially on social media platforms, to exploit national fault lines.He said Nigerians should check the source of any news item being pushed their way and stop sharing whatever they could not vouch for.
The minister specifically thanked the management of the Authority Newspaper for supporting the campaign against fake news, especially with a recent editorial it published on it.
Mr Madu Onuorah, the Managing Director of the Newspaper, thanked the minister for the visit and assured him of support to ensure the success of the campaign against fake news.The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the minister fielded questions ranging from politics to economy from the management team of the newspaper.