We can’t stop using Twitter, Adeboye tells FG

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Pastor Enoch Adeboye

Pastor E.A Adeboye, the General Overseer of The Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), has reacted to the suspension of Twitter in Nigeria by President Buhari.
In a tweet on Monday afternoon, Pastor Adeboye said the church will continue to use Twitter despite Buhari’s ban stressing that the church is domiciled in 170 nations.
“The Redeemed Christian Church of God is domiciled in more than 170 Nations & Territories. The tweets here are in accordance to Article 19 of the UN universal declaration of Human Rights,” Daddy G.O as he’s fondly called said.
Adeboye’s congregation is one of the largest in Nigeria, and Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo has attended the church and served as a preacher for several years.
The comments came two days after Attorney-General Abubakar Malami threatened to arrest and prosecute any Nigerian caught using Twitter, saying a federal press release announcing suspension of the social media giant in the country would be enforced as a law.
Meanwhile, the Federal Government has given a condition to lift its indefinite suspension of Twitter in Nigeria.
Geoffrey Onyeama, Minister of Foreign Affairs, said at a meeting with some envoys that Twitter’s operations in Nigeria will be restored only if the platform can be used “responsibly.”
Asked when the ban will be lifted, Onyeama said there is no definite timeline for that, but added: “The condition would be responsible use of the social media and that really has to be it.
“We are not saying that Twitter is threatening the country or any such thing; why we have taken this measure is to stop them to be used as platforms for destabilisation and facilitation of criminality or encouragement of criminalities,” he also said.
At the meeting, which held in Abuja on Monday, were the envoys of the US, UK, Canada and the European Union, all of whom had condemned the “indefinite” suspension of Twitter in Nigeria.
Despite the government’s claim that Twitter is being used to undermine the existence of Nigeria, some have argued the suspension may be connected to the company’s decision to delete President Muhammadu Buhari tweet recently.
In a joint statement issued on Saturday, the envoys had said: “We strongly support the fundamental human right of free expression and access to information as a pillar of democracy in Nigeria as around the world and these rights apply online as well as offline. Banning systems of expression is not the answer.”
This prompted the Federal Government to invite them to the meeting. After the parley held behind closed-doors, Oneyema said both parties had successful discussions on the issue.
The minister said the government takes the comments of the envoys “very seriously”, hence the decision to discuss the matter with them in the “usual friendly way.”
He, however, insisted that the Buhari administration has to keep an eye on its main objective and legacy which, according to him, is the security of lives and property.
He said Nigeria will not sit back and watch social media being used to “destabilise” the country, adding: “We want to use social media for good.”
“Differences of opinion is not a problem; everybody will not think alike,” he said.
“But lives matter; Nigerian lives matter and we have to do everything we can to preserve Nigerian lives. And when we feel our goals are threatened, actions need to be taken.”
And in a related development, the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC), has directed all the broadcast stations in the country to deactivate their Twitter handles, following the banning of the microblogging app by the Federal Government. (New Telegraph)

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