"Insulteurs" depuis l’étrangers dans le viseur du CNRM : La réplique de Mollah Morgan
Mollah Morgun already feels targeted. Indeed, yesterday Tuesday, during the adoption of the bill creating the National Media Regulatory Council (CNRM), the Minister of Communication, Telecommunications and Digital Affairs had made his intentions clear.
“The CNRM will now regulate the print media, online media, and sharing platforms. Yes, TikTok, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube are within its scope of action,” he declared to the members of parliament. The CNRM has been granted sanctioning powers that could affect individuals outside of Senegal.
"When we called Meta (Facebook) and TikTok to ask them why they don't remove content from people who insult from abroad, they told us that in Senegal, we don't have a law regulating this. So it was urgent to pass this law," said Minister Alioune Sall.
Mouhamadou Niasse, also known as Mollah Morgun, famous for his inflammatory rhetoric from Canada, quickly responded after the vote on the bill. "It seems a new threat hangs over activists: a law aimed at allowing their extradition. I remind them right now that this attempt is doomed to failure," he replied.
He states that a similar initiative had been attempted in the past, but without success: "Your predecessor Macky bit the dust in a similar project. Whistleblowers are not easy targets. History teaches us that these maneuvers, often intended to silence dissent, invariably encounter the resilience of those who defend their convictions," he says.
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