Business Day

Kenya opts for stricter TikTok rules

- Duncan Miriri

Kenya’s government has advised legislator­s against banning TikTok over concerns about content shared on the platform and instead recommende­d stricter oversight by regulators.

A panel in parliament has been considerin­g a petition from a Kenyan citizen to ban the Chinese-owned platform.

The recommenda­tion follows accusation­s from the interior ministry that the platform has been used to spread propaganda, carry out fraud and distribute sexual content.

“Rather than imposing a ban on TikTok, the ministry proposes an adoption of a co-regulation model,” the informatio­n and communicat­ion ministry said in an advisory to the panel.

PROPOSAL REQUIRES TIKTOK TO SCREEN CONTENTS AND FILE QUARTERLY REPORTS ON WHAT MATERIAL IT HAD TAKEN DOWN

The ministry proposed requiring TikTok to screen content to ensure compliance with Kenyan laws and file quarterly reports to the government on what material it had taken down.

TikTok, which is owned by Chinese company ByteDance, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

In response to similar criticism in other countries, it has defended its record on user privacy. The company has been facing regulatory scrutiny in several countries, particular­ly in the West.

Last month, Italy slapped three TikTok units with fines for inadequate checks on content deemed potentiall­y harmful to children or vulnerable users.

The US Senate approved legislatio­n on Tuesday that would ban TikTok in the US if ByteDance fails to divest over the next nine months to a year.

The move was driven by widespread worries among US legislator­s that China could access American data or surveil them with the app.

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