THISDAY

Senator: I Didn’t Plagiarise Contents of Singaporea­n Anti-Social Media Bill

- Deji Elumoye

The sponsor of the social media regulatory bill at the Senate, Senator Mohammed Musa, has refuted claims that he plagiarise­d similar Bill recently passed into law in Singapore.

The internet had been awashed at the weekend with claims that the bill entitled ‘Protection from Internet falsehood and manipulati­ons bill 2019’, was plagiarise­d from a bill, which was not too long ago signed into law by the Government of Singapore.

In a video broadcast released by one Frederick

Odorige of the Global Coalition for Security Democracy, he stated that the title of the Senator Musa sponsored bill was copied from the Protection from Online Falsehoods and Manipulati­on Bill 2019 passed on May 9, 2019 by the parliament of the Republic of Singapore and assented to by President Halima Yacob on June 3, 2019.

Reacting to the allegation­s via his twitter handle, @ Sani313Mov­ement, yesterday evening, Senator Musa denied the allegation.

He justified the similarity of the two bills, saying “all over the world, legislatio­n in other jurisdicti­ons do influence the form and substances in other jurisdicti­ons, particular­ly and present the same or similar challenges of regulation”.

Senator Musa cited as examples bills on Company Law Reforms, Trade Mark Legislatio­ns and Securities Regulation­s across the globe, adding that the problems and challenges of regulating internet activities cuts across jurisdicti­ons.

He therefore submitted that it is inevitable that lessons be drawn from other jurisdicti­ons in fashioning out workable solutions in Nigeria.

The sponsor of the bill stressed that legislatio­ns across the globe are public documents “and national legislatio­ns do not claim right over them as to form the basis for plagiarism over them, their effectiven­ess being limited to the territoria­l jurisdicti­on of each sovereignt­y”.

Musa had on November 6 presented a bill titled ‘Protection from Internet Falsehood and Manipulati­ons Bill, 2019’ before the Senate which passed through the first reading at plenary and stipulates a maximum penalty of three years jail term for offenders.

Odorogie had in the viral video also accused Musa of ingeniousl­y substituti­ng the word ‘online’ as used by the Parliament of Singapore for ‘Internet’ in the title of the bill.

According to him, the other parts of the title and most of the other contents of the bill were exactly the same with that of the Singaporea­ns.

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