Operator(s) of @SegunObasanjo, a controversial Twitter handle associated
with former President Olusegun Obasanjo, may have to look elsewhere for
another deceptive platform. The account has been deactivated from the
social networking platform.
Investigation shows that the account, which was still active last weekend, was removed from Twitter on Tuesday.
The Twitter handle rode on the back of the recent political rift between
Obasanjo and President Goodluck Jonathan to gain prominence. It enjoyed
regular visits by politicians and journalists, who saw it as a useful
source of information.
Cashing in on the internal conflict in the Peoples Democratic Party, in
which Obasanjo was a key factor, the operator (s) in the account
attacked perceived enemies of the former President and responded to
their remarks.
A number of the statements credited to Obasanjo, even by some
traditional media organisations (PUNCH excluded), were sourced from the
fake account.
Indeed, Obasanjo publicly refuted some of the statements posted by the
operator(s) and dissociated himself from any existing social media
account.
Last weekend, the unknown tweeter(s), who were obviously responding to
the reactions that trailed Obasanjo’s exit from PDP, attacked the former
Minister of Aviation and Director of Media/Publicity of the PDP
Presidential Campaign Organisation, Femi Fani-Kayode, describing him as a
“wrecker” of democracy.
“Fani-Kayode is a democracy wrecker, who is very fluent in stupidity.
Give him food, and he will sing and do ‘shoki’ dance for you,” the tweet
said.
But, reacting to the tweet on Monday, Obasanjo reiterated that he was
not on Twitter or Facebook having closed the accounts he maintained on
the platforms earlier.
“I don’t know where this comes from. I do not have any account on either
Facebook or Twitter again. Go and block it,” he warned the unknown
operator(s).
He cautioned those using his name to operate illegal social media
accounts, saying the security agencies had been placed on the alert to
fish out the perpetrators.
He said, “Let me say that nemesis will catch up with anyone doing this.
It is illegal and criminal. If I have to pass any message to the good
people of Nigeria, I know how to go about it with no controversy.”
The @SegunObasanjo operator(s) may have heeded Obasanjo’s threat to have
them arrested by the security agencies if they failed to stop operating
the illegal account. But the former President could only pray that
other cloned accounts do not enjoy as much popularity the deactivated
one.
Some of the existing accounts believed to have been targeted at
exploiting his personality are @OlusegunObasnjo, @BabaIyabo,
@BabaObasanjo and @Obasanjo. The accounts were opened between 2011 and
2014. Obasanjo’s identity also faces a similar duplication on Facebook.
The former President may not be the only person among past leaders of
the country (especially former Heads of State) that is facing the rising
identity theft on the new media. Gen. Ibrahim Babangida (retd.)’s name
also features on different social networking platforms.
One of the Twitter accounts opened in Babangida’s name has gained
prominence in recent weeks with bloggers scooping information from the
page and attributing it to the retired general.
Even with a clear indication that the handle supposedly operated by
Babangida is a “parody account”, notable public figures, including
governors, are among its 16,400 followers.
The suspicious account tweets messages almost every hour and takes a
critical look at issues that shape political discussion. On Tuesday, it
tweeted, “Nigerian journalists are pretenders. They pretend they did not
hear about the Ekiti leaked tape, but they are the first to report the
speculation on the health of the All Progressives Congress presidential
candidate, Maj. Gen. Muhammadu Buhari.”
Operator(s) of the account also took a swipe at Fani-Kayode and the
former Minister of State for Defence, Musliu Obanikoro, describing them
as “dangerous political prostitutes.”
Online media had recently attributed a tweet on the page, alleging that
Fani-Kayode was a taxi driver in the United Kingdom until Obasanjo
brought him to Nigeria and “changed his life,” to the former Head of
State.
But the ex-minister responded, saying, “From birth, my family has had
the best chauffeur-driven cars in the UK and other parts of the world. I
hardly used taxis much less drove one.”
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