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Nigeria: Nigeria wants Google to block banned groups from YouTube

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The government of Nigeria has made a request for tech giant Google, to block banned groups and terrorist organizations from using YouTube channels and livestreams, Information Minister Lai Mohammed said.

Africa’s most populous nation has been exploring ways to regulate social media usage. The country is home to millions of internet users and platforms like YouTube, Twitter, Facebook and TikTok are popular.

Speaking to Google executives in the capital Abuja Mohammed said, YouTube “channels and emails containing names of banned groups and their affiliates should not be allowed on Google platforms.”

Charles Murito, Google’s sub-Saharan African director for government affairs and public policy, in a statement said the company already has measures to address the Nigerian government’s concerns.

Those measures include a system for trained users to flag troublesome content, he added. “We share the same goals and objectives,” Murito said. “We do not want our platform to be used for ill purposes.”

The minister said the government was particularly concerned with online activities by the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB). The government has labelled IPOB, a group campaigning for the secession of a south eastern region of Nigeria, a “terrorist organization.”

The YouTube concerns are part of an effort by the government, the minister said, to protect Nigerian internet users from harmful effects of social media, especially ahead of a presidential election next year.

Nigeria suspended Twitter in June 2021 and blocked access to users after the social media giant removed a post from President Muhammadu Buhari threatening to punish regional secessionists.

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