Advertisement

Cameroon wants Facebook to help fight fake news

Thursday September 13 2018
Cameroon

Scared civilians load their belongings on vehicles to flee from the trouble-hit Southwest Cameroon on September 13, 2018. A dawn-to-dusk curfew has been imposed in the region following a blockade by separatists. NDI EUGENE NDI | NATION MEDIA GROUP

By NDI EUGENE NDI

The government of Cameroon has solicited the services of Facebook to help fight the spread of fake news and hate speech, especially during the upcoming presidential election.

A team from the American online social media and social networking service company has been holding meetings and trainings with stakeholders in Cameroon.

Meanwhile, a two-day symposium on digital rights and elections in Cameroon ends Thursday in Yaoundé.

The rights

The meeting that has brought together different stakeholders, was seeking collaboration in the fight against online misinformation during electoral periods without undermining the rights of Internet users.

There were growing fears that the Cameroon government would cut off the Internet, at least to the crisis-hit English speaking Northwest and Southwest, during the October 7 presidential poll.

Advertisement

Though the Post and Telecommunications ministry dismissed fears of an imminent Internet blockade as “sheer manipulation and fake news”, critics took the rebuttal with a pinch of salt.

The blackouts

Cameroon has witnessed at least two Internet cuts since January last year with government saying the blackouts aimed at preventing the spread of hate speech and fake news via the social media.

But activists say shutting the Internet was an infringement on the rights of citizens and that the government could adopt other measures to fight against online misinformation without undermining the rights of Internet users.

Advertisement