The Digital Africa Research and Safety Lab (DigiAfricaLab) has issued a call for rigorous evidence and restraint in response to recent allegations involving the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).
In a statement issued on Thursday, April 23, the organisation addresses a heated public debate over claims of partisan social media accounts allegedly linked to the INEC chairman.
DigiAfricaLab emphasises that in a digital landscape prone to impersonation and malicious parody, public conclusions must be grounded in verifiable data rather than inference.
According to the research lab, Nigeria’s online environment presents unique challenges, including the frequent reuse of accounts and the prevalence of sophisticated impersonation.
The organisation argues that establishing true account ownership requires platform-level data from X (formerly Twitter) rather than circumstantial observations.
They cautioned that while a lack of verification doesn’t automatically prove an account is fake, it certainly does not serve as conclusive evidence of an official link to a public figure.
As the country moves toward the 2027 general elections, the lab is urging media houses, fact-checkers, and civil society actors to prioritise accuracy and transparency.
The statement specifically advises against the use of unverified, AI-generated, or inferential claims as facts.
DigiAfricaLab believes it is important to protect the sanctity of public institutions to build the nation’s confidence in the democratic process by promoting legal means of procuring information from X Corp.
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