The publisher of Sahara Reporters has accused Nigeria’s Senate
President, Bukola Saraki, of cloning his newspaper and stealing his
brand identities to create fake versions of his website.
Sahara Reporters, a U.S.-based news website, with special focus on
Nigeria, said it believed the Nigerian senate president, who is facing
charges of false asset declaration, is masterminding the proliferation
of imitation of cloned versions of the newspaper aimed at circulating
lies to the public while disguising as Sahara Reporters.
The publisher, Omoyele Sowore, said his team had so far blocked three
fake websites since January 2015. He said the faking websites were
blocked from Google, Web4Africa and Twitter.
“The only one left is a Facebook account,” Mr. Sowore said.
The outstanding fake account is named Sahara Reporters Rescue.
Checks by PREMIUM TIMES showed that it had assumed the branding
features of the original Sahara Reporters with insignificant
modifications.
Mr. Sowore said Sahara Reporter Rescue had succeeded in deceiving
about 30 thousand people while circulating contents praising and
defending Mr. Saraki.
Its bio is an exact copy-and-paste version of the original Sahara Reporters.
“I know Saraki is directly behind it,” Mr. Sowore said, explaining
that he was only concerned the public might mistake the page for the
original Sahara Reporters.
Identity theft is an emerging fraud in the Nigerian cyberspace,
mainly used by politicians to clone digital identities of critical media
house with the aim of using the clone to pass down propagandist inform,
faking endorsement.
It is a form of cyber attack that utilizes deception, rather than the brute force of DDoS attacks.
PREMIUM TIMES was a victim of similar attacks. The latest is by
individuals linked to the current governor of River State, Nyesom Wike.
While many other digital businesses treat identity theft with urgency
and seriousness, Facebook is notorious for being slow in checking the
crime.
Facebook’s clumsy reporting process and policy make fighting clones and replicas almost impossible for victims.
The suspected pirate
The suspected pirate is Osinuga Oriola Mcleish, a blogger and member
of the Kwara All Progressives Congress. Although Mr. Osinuga denies the
crime, investigations by PREMIUM TIMES traced his digital footprints on
the downed websites and the fake Sahara Reporters Facebook Page.
“I don’t know anything about it,” Mr. Osinuga said before hanging up during an interview.
Mr. Saraki’s new media team also denied involvement in the crime.
“Sahara Reporters is not that important for me to waste my time on,”
Bankole Omishore, a new media aide to the Senate President told PREMIUM
TIMES. “We no longer monitor Sahara Reporters.”
Mr. Omishore said Sahara Reporters had been critical of his boss,
claiming the newspaper was hired to promote propaganda to sack Mr.
Saraki.
The publisher of Sahara Reporters denies any personal grievances with
the senate president, saying , “I only have beef with thieves.”
“I’ve been covering Saraki since 2005 with the same tenacity I
covered (James) Ibori,” he said. “I know very well he (Saraki) has
stolen a lot of money and should not be Nigeria’s number three man.”
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