The Senate on Tuesday rescinded its
decision to pass a bill that seek to jail online critics of the government
seven years. By this the Senate had bowed to pressure over criticisms that had
greeted its proposed bill on electronic transactions and fraud detection,
which stipulated a seven-year jail term for any user of social media who
post information that threatened the security of the country.
Specifically, section 13 (3) of
the draft bill stipulates that “any person who intentionally propagate false
information that could threaten the security of the country or that is capable
of inciting the general public against the government through electronic
message shall be guilty of an offence and upon conviction, shall be
sentenced to seven years imprisonment, or a fine of N5m, or both.”
The controversies that the provision
of the bill generated after the public hearing two weeks ago, attracted
negative publicity for the Senate.
But the sponsor of the bill, Senator
Adegbenga Kaka, in company with the Chairman, Senate Committee on Information,
Media and Public Affairs, Senator Eyinnaya Abaribe announced to journalists on
Tuesday that the offending clause had been deleted from the bill.
“I have the permission of the senate
leadership to announce to the world that that the section 13 (3) shall be
deleted,” he said.
Kaka added, “The bill that I
presented to the Senate, precisely on July 28, 2011, was a bill to
regulate the electronic transfer of funds and after presentation, by the
time we got to the second reading there was a remark that a similar bill was
tabled before the sixth senate by Senator Ayo Arise.
“I was then asked to go and rework my
own and marry it with that of Senator Arise. In the course of doing it, a bill
for an act for the prohibition of all electronics transfer, all electronics
transaction fraud and electronic transfer transactions in Nigeria and other
related matters was presented.
“It passed through the first reading,
and the second reading and last week, there was a public hearing by the joint
committee on Judiciary, narcotics.”
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Politics
No, they shouldn't have reversed it if they knew they weren't demigods and that 109 senators could not sit there in Abuja and decide the fate of 160 million Nigerians. Shameless thieves, cheating in an election and stealing public funds are even bigger crimes that should attract life in prison or death by hanging and yet you so called senators go scot free with such crimes. Come and gag us let's see, then you'll know there's a limit to which we can take. It will not work in this 21st century. Sen David Mark, you better stop ur people from proposing foolish bills that would provoke the masses again.
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