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The Cyber Campaign Against Sen. Abdulaziz Yari: Facts, Politics, and the Danger of Digital Misinformation

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In recent days, Senator Abdulaziz Abubakar Yari has found himself at the centre of a renewed wave of online allegations ranging from claims of involvement in a supposed ₦1.7 trillion financial scandal to viral videos circulated by activist Dan Bello linking him to corruption and illegal gold dealings.

While public accountability is essential in any democracy, the pattern emerging around these accusations raises serious concerns about digital misinformation, political targeting, and trial by social media rather than by competent investigative institutions.

The ₦1.7 trillion allegation being circulated online is not new. It is part of a series of claims that have appeared repeatedly in different forms across blogs and social media platforms. Some reports link large financial flows and corporate acquisitions to Yari, but these remain unproven allegations without any final judicial conviction or official court ruling confirming wrongdoing.

In fact, multiple reports and counter-statements from political associates have consistently described such claims as politically motivated narratives designed to damage his reputation ahead of future political cycles.

Similarly, claims connecting Yari to gold seizures at Kano airport have also been widely circulated online, but there has been no official confirmation from the EFCC naming him as a suspect or charging him in relation to the seizure.  

This distinction is critical: in law, allegation is not evidence, and viral content is not verdict.

The emergence of activist-driven investigative content on social media has reshaped public discourse in Nigeria. Figures like Dan Bello have gained large followings by producing viral exposés. However, the problem arises when unverified claims are presented in a way that mimics formal investigative authority without the legal burden of proof.

Even where allegations involve public interest issues like corruption or illicit finance, responsible communication demands clear separation between suspicion, investigation, and proven fact.

Nigeria’s political environment is highly competitive, and major political figures often become targets of sustained online campaigns. Senator Yari, a former governor and influential political actor, naturally attracts scrutiny.

However, scrutiny must not be confused with coordinated narrative warfare. The timing, repetition, and amplification of these allegations across multiple platforms suggest a pattern that goes beyond routine accountability journalism.

One of the foundations of democracy is that guilt is determined in court, not in comment sections. Even where security agencies are conducting investigations—as reported in some financial crime allegations—due process requires:

* Proper charging

* Presentation of evidence

* Fair hearing

* Judicial determination

Until such processes conclude, public narratives must remain cautious.

In the absence of conviction, continuous public framing of an individual as guilty risks undermining both justice and democratic fairness.

This is not an argument against accountability or anti-corruption efforts. Rather, it is a call for discipline in public communication and ethical responsibility in digital storytelling.

Senator Abdulaziz Yari, like any public figure, is open to scrutiny. But scrutiny must be anchored on facts, not viral speculation.

Nigeria’s democracy will be stronger when citizens demand:

* Evidence over emotion

* Investigation over insinuation

* Judgment through courts, not timelines

Until then, the rise of digital political attacks risks replacing truth with trending narratives—and that is dangerous for everyone, regardless of political affiliation.

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