News
New Bill Seeks All Bloggers In Kenya To Register With Goverment And Pay For License Or Risk Jail Or Sh500,000 Fine
In what could be the dumbest of them all, the Kenya Information and Communication (Amendment) Bill, 2019 has sparked debate by Kenyans after the Bill masquerading as a law to get rid of offensive content on the inter-webs has turned into pure idiocy and an attempt to gag citizens from raising issues that would otherwise not be highlighted by the mainstream media
The Bill which requires Facebook And WhatsApp group admins to apply for licences from the government also targets bloggers who the Bill defines as those involved in “collecting, writing, editing and presenting of news or news articles in social media platforms or in the internet.”
Those who run blogs without CA’s authority could spend up to two years in jail or pay fines of up to Sh500,000. The regulator will have a register of bloggers in the country and develop a bloggers’ code of conduct. The Bill’s memorandum of objects and reasons, states; “The new part will introduce new sections to the Act on licensing of social media platforms, sharing of information by a licensed person, creates obligations to social media users, registration of bloggers and seeks to give responsibility to CA to develop a bloggers’ code of conduct in consultation with bloggers.”
The Bill sponsored by Malava MP Malulu Injendi is clearly a sneaky way of curtailing freedom of expression, we’ve seen African leaders coming with dumbest legislations like in Uganda the social media tax. Facebook and Twitter for example are micro blogging platforms where people share information, basically, everyone is a potential blogger.
However, we know the real motive is to curtail the voices of those most vocal and the big bloggers in Kenya so the mainstream media can have the monopoly of news dissemination. Government has been successful in controlling the mainstream media unlike the bloggers.
This stupid bill must not see the light of the day, we’re past the dark days of the state controlling information. This is not only unconstitutional but goes further to tell how scared the government is on social media and how foolish some like the Malava MP can get. Any competent constitutional court will throw away this nonsense in the filthiest dustbin.
Kenya Insights allows guest blogging, if you want to be published on Kenya’s most authoritative and accurate blog, have an expose, news TIPS, story angles, human interest stories, drop us an email on [email protected] or via Telegram
-
News2 weeks agoKenyan Driver Hospitalized After Dubai Assault for Rejecting Gay Advances, Passport Seized as Authorities Remain Silent
-
Investigations1 week agoMoney Bior, Lawyer Stephen Ndeda Among 18 Accused Of Running An International Fraud Ring Involved With Scamming American Investor Sh500 Million
-
Investigations6 days agoNestlé Accused of Risking Babies’ Health in Africa with ‘Toxic’ Cerelac Product Sold Highest in Kenya
-
Business2 weeks agoConstruction Of Stalled Yaya Center Block Resumes After More Than 3 Decades and The Concrete Story Behind It
-
Investigations2 weeks agoHow Somali Money From Minnesota Fraud Ended In Funding Nairobi Real Estate Boom, Al Shabaab Attracting Trump’s Wrath
-
News1 week agoTSC Announces Major Policy Shift To End Transfer Of Promoted Teachers
-
News6 days ago48-Year-Old Woman Who Pushed 25-Year-Old Boyfriend To Death From 14th Floor Kilimani Apartment Arrested
-
Investigations3 days agoHow Land Grabbing Cartels Have Captured Ardhi House



