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Why Social Media Must Be Regulated – Gbajabiamila

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The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila has said that social media must be regulated to protect every citizen of the country against its negative sides.

Speaking during a programme on Channels Television on Sunday, Gbajabiamila said everything in life must have regulations no matter what it is.

Gbajabiamila noted that social media is the “most potent instrument” that can be used for good and bad.

He added that the National Assembly has faced harsh criticism in its attempts to regulate social media.

The speaker noted that freedom of speech is not absolute, stressing that there must a balance in the regulation of social media so that the rights of individuals are not infringed upon.

He said: “Like everything in life, there has to be regulation. We know that social media is perhaps the most potent instrument that can be used for good and can be used for the negative.

“We welcome the good. We must not paper over the bad or the evil. That is my position about social media regulation.

“We must strike a balance, where peoples’ rights to speech are not infringed upon but where your rights to speech ends or begins, it is where my own rights or next person’s rights to protection begins.

“Many more countries, democracies that we all look up to are already in the mood of regulating social media.

“National assembly has been contemplating regulation for a long time. Each time they do, people will kick. Why did you kick? They say freedom of speech.

“It is a delicate balance. Very, very delicate. It is something we need to do as responsible. You heard of cyberbullying, children nagging themselves, killing themselves because of what is on social media. We do not want that.

“It is something we need to do because we have a responsibility to protect every single citizen in this country and that is what we must do.”

On the suspension of Twitter’s operations, the speaker noted that the National Assembly has not taken any position on the issue.

He noted that as a leader, it is necessary to listen to the two sides — the federal government and Twitter — before making a decision.

National assembly has not taken a position. Before you take a position, you have to listen to all sides. It cannot be knee-jerky. We have a responsibility, if I was on the outside I know the position I will take,” he said.

“On the inside, I have been elected by the people, I have to be on the side of the people but I also have to know exactly what the facts and the true situation is. It is not a beauty contest.



Ige Olugbenga is a fine-grained journalist. He loves the smell of a good lead and has a penchant for finding out something nobody else knows.