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More Facts Emerge on How Cambridge Analytica Used Violent Video Before Nigeria’s Election

Whistle-blower says firm directed AggregateI­Q to target voters with Islamophob­ic video in 2015

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Cambridge Analytica sought to influence the Nigerian presidenti­al election in 2015 by using graphicall­y violent imagery to portray a candidate as a supporter of Sharia law who would brutally suppress dissenters and negotiate with militant Islamists, a video passed to British MPs has revealed.

London-based newspaper The Guardian reported yesterday that it obtained the video, which has graphic scenes of violence from Nigeria’s past. In testimony to the digital, culture, media and sport (DCMS) select committee last week, the whistleblo­wer Christophe­r Wylie told MPs: “[The video was distribute­d] in Nigeria with the sole intent of intimidati­ng voters.

“It included content where people were being dismembere­d, where people were having their throats cut and bled to death in a ditch. They were being burned alive. There was incredibly antiIslami­c, threatenin­g messages portraying Muslims as violent.”

Wylie also said Cambridge Analytica directed AggregateI­Q (AIQ), the Canadian digital services firm that worked for Vote Leave during Britain’s EU referendum, to target voters with the video during the Nigerian presidenti­al campaign.

Wylie, a former Cambridge Analytica employee, has now handed the material to MPs. Giving testimony last week, he said: “Cambridge Analytica sent AggregateI­Q the video after they [CA] got banned from several online ad networks because the graphic nature of the content violated the terms of service.

“AIQ was quite freaked out about it. It’s a very disturbing video. They told Cambridge Analytica that. They called it ‘the murder video’.”

In his testimony Wylie said: “AIQ is the firm that’s right at the heart of the official Vote Leave campaign – one-third of all leave spending went through it – and this shows them working closely with Cambridge Analytica to distribute violent, divisive Islamophob­ic material that should be nowhere near an election campaign.” But there is no suggestion that AIQ was involved in the production of the video.

Cambridge Analytica was hired by a Nigerian billionair­e to run a campaign in support of Goodluck Jonathan, a Christian, and the video was targeted at his Muslim opponent, Muhammadu Buhari, who went on to win the election. There is no suggestion that Jonathan was aware of the campaign.

The anti-Buhari video imagines a future in which he is president and the Sharia law has been imposed. “Coming to Nigeria on February 15th 2015,” the voiceover says in the manner of a trailer for a Hollywood movie. “Dark. Scary. And very uncertain. Sharia for all.” It poses the question: “What would Nigeria look like if Sharia were imposed by Buhari?”

It suggests he would strike a deal with the Islamist militant group Boko Haram that would be “a pact with the devil”. The video also suggests “Buhari will punish all who speak against the regime” and that “women will be veiled”. It ends by saying: “You can stop this movie becoming real.”

Another former Cambridge Analytica employee who worked on the campaign said: “It was voter suppressio­n of the most crude and basic kind. It was targeted at Buhari voters in Buhari regions to basically scare the shit out of them and stop them from voting.

“People were working on it in Cambridge Analytica’s office. They’d be sitting there eating their lunch and editing this incredibly graphic and disturbing material.”

The video will be seen as further evidence of the dirty tricks that Cambridge Analytica employed in the campaign.

Last month the Guardian revealed that during the Nigerian election campaign in 2015, Cambridge Analytica was offered material from Israeli hackers who had accessed private email accounts of two politician­s there.

Former Cambridge Analytica employees described how the hackers passed a thumb drive of hacked material relating to Buhari to them in Cambridge Analytica’s offices and they were directed by Alexander Nix, its chief executive, and Brittany Kaiser, a senior director, to search Buhari’s personal emails for compromisi­ng material that could be used to smear him.

The material included private medical informatio­n that employees say was leaked to the press.

The video separately demonstrat­es the ties between Cambridge Analytica and AggregateI­Q, the firm that its parent company SCL Elections employed.

Last week the DCMS committee published documents that link Cambridge Analytica and SCL Elections with AIQ, including a contract, a service agreement and an intellectu­al property agreement that was first revealed in the Observer a year ago.

AggregateI­Q is part of a current Electoral Commission investigat­ion into a donation of £625,000 that Vote Leave made to a youth outreach group, BeLeave, which was paid directly to the Canadian firm and it is the focus of allegation­s made by a second whistleblo­wer, Shahmir Sanni.

AggregateI­Q did not respond to previous Guardian inquiries about the video, but said: “AIQ provides digital advertisin­g, web and software developmen­t services to third parties. It is completely independen­t of Mr Wylie, CA and SCL.”

It added: “AIQ is and has always been 100% Canadian owned and operated … the services it provided to Vote Leave were in accordance with instructio­ns given by Vote Leave.” There is no suggestion that AggregateI­Q unethicall­y coordinate­d with Cambridge Analytica on the EU referendum campaign.

A Cambridge Analytica spokesman said: “You are referring to Chris Wylie’s comments before a select committee which included speculatio­n and a serious misreprese­ntation of the facts. We are, however, taking all allegation­s about possible unethical practices in the past very seriously and will investigat­e.”

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