Warri Federal Constituency AD
ADVERTISEMENT
  • PT Insider
  • #EndSARS Dashboard
  • PT Hausa
  • About Us
  • PT Jobs
  • Advert Rates
  • Contact Us
  • Digital Store
Thursday, June 25, 2026
Premium Times Nigeria
  • Home
  • News
    • Headline Stories
    • Top News
    • More News
    • Foreign
  • Gender
  • Investigations
    • All
    • Alabuga Reports
    • Blood on Uniforms
    INVESTIGATION: Commissioned But Locked: How an idle hospital is failing women in Akwa Ibom

    INVESTIGATION: Commissioned But Locked: How an idle hospital is failing women in Akwa Ibom

    A roofless section of the Akwa Ibom State House of Assembly Complex

    SPECIAL REPORT: The secrecy, unanswered questions about Akwa Ibom Assembly’s N15.47bn project

    Monisade Afuye, incumbent deputy governor of Ekiti State (APC)

    #EkitiDecides2026: A ballot without women candidates

    An illustration depicting the terrorists’ use of social media platforms

    How Nigerian terrorists use TikTok, exploit country’s digital governance gap

    SPECIAL REPORT: Failing waste system leaves Lagos roads buried in trash

    SPECIAL REPORT: Failing waste system leaves Lagos roads buried in trash

    A group of VCMs at Primary Healthcare Centre Kofar Rini, before going out for outreach. Picture_ Qosim Suleiman

    SPECIAL REPORT: Inside Sokoto’s fight against polio vaccine hesitancy

    Scene of the fire incident

    SPECIAL REPORT: Day Akwa Ibom market burned because a fire truck had no fuel

    Nigeria-Maritime-University-NMU

    SPECIAL REPORT: Nigeria’s maritime university upgrade stalls as billions flow into repealed academy

    Outside view of Primary school Emere-Oke

    Resource Curse? The only school in this Akwa Ibom oil community lies in ruins

  • Business
    • News Reports
    • Financial Inclusion
    • Analysis and Data
    • Business Specials
    • Trade Insights
    • Opinion
    • Oil/Gas Reports
      • FAAC Reports
      • Revenue
  • Opinion
    • All
    • Analysis
    • Columns
    • Contributors
    • Editorial
    Umar Yakubu, Executive Director of the Centre for Fiscal Transparency and Public Integrity (CeFTPI)

     All protocols obsessed, By Umar Yakubu

    Zainab Suleiman Okino writes about Sule Lamido and his new biography.

    NDC anti-defection law: Political loyalty or coercion?, By Zainab Suleiman Okino

    Dr Chido Onumah writes about the demise of Comrade Bene Madunagu.

    From partnership to progress: SDP4 and the future of UK–Nigeria security cooperation, By Chido Onumah

    Mr Musikilu Mojeed writes about how the late President Jimmy Carter and former President Olusegun Obasanjo related.

    National security and press freedom: Striking the right balance in a democracy, By Musikilu Mojeed

    Professor Babafemi Badejo writes about JAMB 2025 and the way forward.

    Re-awakening the Nigerian conscience against corruption, By Babafemi Badejo 

    Zekeri Idakwo Laruba writes about the telecom tariff hikes.

    Customs and FRSC reforms: Rewarding performance, sustaining progress, By Zekeri Idakwo Laruba

  • Health
    • News Reports
    • Special Reports and Investigations
    • Health Specials
    • Features and Interviews
    • Multimedia
    • Primary Health Tracker
  • Agriculture
    • News Report
    • Special Reports/Investigations
    • Features
    • Interviews
    • Multimedia
  • Arts/Life
    • Arts/Books
    • Kannywood
    • Lifestyle
    • Music
    • Nollywood
    • Travel
  • Sports
    • Football
    • More Sports News
    • Sports Features
    • Casino
      • iGaming
      • Non AAMS
      • Online Kaszinó Magyar
      • non Gamstop casinos
      • Kasyna online
    • Games
      • كازينو اون لاين
      • Geriausi kazino internetu
      • Онлайн казино Казахстан
  • Elections
    • 2024 Ondo Governorship Election
    • 2024 Edo Governorship Election
    • Presidential
    • Gubernatorial
  • Home
  • News
    • Headline Stories
    • Top News
    • More News
    • Foreign
  • Gender
  • Investigations
    • All
    • Alabuga Reports
    • Blood on Uniforms
    INVESTIGATION: Commissioned But Locked: How an idle hospital is failing women in Akwa Ibom

    INVESTIGATION: Commissioned But Locked: How an idle hospital is failing women in Akwa Ibom

    A roofless section of the Akwa Ibom State House of Assembly Complex

    SPECIAL REPORT: The secrecy, unanswered questions about Akwa Ibom Assembly’s N15.47bn project

    Monisade Afuye, incumbent deputy governor of Ekiti State (APC)

    #EkitiDecides2026: A ballot without women candidates

    An illustration depicting the terrorists’ use of social media platforms

    How Nigerian terrorists use TikTok, exploit country’s digital governance gap

    SPECIAL REPORT: Failing waste system leaves Lagos roads buried in trash

    SPECIAL REPORT: Failing waste system leaves Lagos roads buried in trash

    A group of VCMs at Primary Healthcare Centre Kofar Rini, before going out for outreach. Picture_ Qosim Suleiman

    SPECIAL REPORT: Inside Sokoto’s fight against polio vaccine hesitancy

    Scene of the fire incident

    SPECIAL REPORT: Day Akwa Ibom market burned because a fire truck had no fuel

    Nigeria-Maritime-University-NMU

    SPECIAL REPORT: Nigeria’s maritime university upgrade stalls as billions flow into repealed academy

    Outside view of Primary school Emere-Oke

    Resource Curse? The only school in this Akwa Ibom oil community lies in ruins

  • Business
    • News Reports
    • Financial Inclusion
    • Analysis and Data
    • Business Specials
    • Trade Insights
    • Opinion
    • Oil/Gas Reports
      • FAAC Reports
      • Revenue
  • Opinion
    • All
    • Analysis
    • Columns
    • Contributors
    • Editorial
    Umar Yakubu, Executive Director of the Centre for Fiscal Transparency and Public Integrity (CeFTPI)

     All protocols obsessed, By Umar Yakubu

    Zainab Suleiman Okino writes about Sule Lamido and his new biography.

    NDC anti-defection law: Political loyalty or coercion?, By Zainab Suleiman Okino

    Dr Chido Onumah writes about the demise of Comrade Bene Madunagu.

    From partnership to progress: SDP4 and the future of UK–Nigeria security cooperation, By Chido Onumah

    Mr Musikilu Mojeed writes about how the late President Jimmy Carter and former President Olusegun Obasanjo related.

    National security and press freedom: Striking the right balance in a democracy, By Musikilu Mojeed

    Professor Babafemi Badejo writes about JAMB 2025 and the way forward.

    Re-awakening the Nigerian conscience against corruption, By Babafemi Badejo 

    Zekeri Idakwo Laruba writes about the telecom tariff hikes.

    Customs and FRSC reforms: Rewarding performance, sustaining progress, By Zekeri Idakwo Laruba

  • Health
    • News Reports
    • Special Reports and Investigations
    • Health Specials
    • Features and Interviews
    • Multimedia
    • Primary Health Tracker
  • Agriculture
    • News Report
    • Special Reports/Investigations
    • Features
    • Interviews
    • Multimedia
  • Arts/Life
    • Arts/Books
    • Kannywood
    • Lifestyle
    • Music
    • Nollywood
    • Travel
  • Sports
    • Football
    • More Sports News
    • Sports Features
    • Casino
      • iGaming
      • Non AAMS
      • Online Kaszinó Magyar
      • non Gamstop casinos
      • Kasyna online
    • Games
      • كازينو اون لاين
      • Geriausi kazino internetu
      • Онлайн казино Казахстан
  • Elections
    • 2024 Ondo Governorship Election
    • 2024 Edo Governorship Election
    • Presidential
    • Gubernatorial
Premium Times Nigeria
BUA Group Ad BUA Group Ad BUA Group Ad

Why Nigeria needs a national crisis communication hub, By Shuaib S. Agaka

The urgency of this initiative is tied to the changing nature of misinformation itself.

byPremium Times
January 30, 2026
Reading Time: 3 mins read
0
Google Logo Add us on Google
MTN ADVERT

The broader lesson is clear: in the digital age, speed without credibility is dangerous. Accuracy, transparency, and trust must move just as fast. The National Crisis Communication Hub seeks to institutionalise these principles, ensuring that Nigeria’s democracy is judged by facts — not by manufactured narratives.

Nigeria’s information space has evolved from a battleground of rumours into a theatre of manufactured realities. What once required organised propaganda networks can now be executed by individuals armed with widely available digital tools. The result is a new class of threats that blur the line between truth and fiction, reshaping how societies perceive events in real time.

FIRST BANK AD Do you live in Ogijo

This transformation carries serious implications for national stability. Misinformation no longer merely misleads; it shapes perception, fuels social tension, and, during moments of crisis, can trigger real-world consequences. In a country as diverse and politically sensitive as Nigeria, false narratives can inflame ethnic, religious, and political divisions — especially during elections, protests, or security emergencies.

It is against this backdrop that the National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA), in partnership with the Centre for Crisis Communication (CCC), endorsed the establishment of a National Crisis Communication Hub. The decision followed a high-level engagement in Abuja during which the CCC leadership met with NITDA’s Director-General, Kashifu Inuwa, to align on a national framework for managing misinformation, countering AI-driven falsehoods, and coordinating communication during sensitive periods.

Premium Times

Stay Ahead with Premium Times

Follow us on Google News and never miss breaking stories, investigations, and in-depth reporting.

Google Logo Add as a preferred source on Google

The concept did not emerge overnight. It was earlier recommended at a National Symposium hosted by the Crisis Communication Centre, where experts agreed that fragmented responses to digital falsehoods are no longer sufficient. In an era of rapid digital manipulation, a coordinated and institutionalised system is essential for safeguarding public trust.

PT WHATSAPP CHANNEL

The urgency of this initiative is tied to the changing nature of misinformation itself. Artificial intelligence can now generate convincing videos, audio clips, and images that fabricate events and impersonate public figures. Falsehoods are no longer accidental distortions; they are deliberate and scalable instruments of influence. Visual and audio materials carry emotional and psychological weight, often shaping opinion before correction can catch up.

Nigeria’s vulnerability is heightened by structural realities — political competition, communal tensions, and longstanding grievances. Social media platforms, now the primary news source for millions, prioritise speed and engagement over accuracy. Sensational content spreads faster than verified information, while traditional gatekeepers struggle to keep pace.

Together, these dynamics have turned Nigeria’s digital environment into an information battlefield where speed, credibility, and coordination determine outcomes. Silence or delayed communication during crises is often interpreted as the confirmation of rumours, while uncoordinated responses can amplify the very narratives they seek to counter. Crisis communication is no longer a media function; it is a matter of national security.

This risk intensifies as Nigeria approaches future national elections. Recent cycles show that electoral disputes now unfold online in real time. Claims of rigging, violence, or institutional bias can gain traction long before official processes conclude. With trust in public institutions already fragile, misinformation becomes a direct threat to electoral legitimacy.

False reports about voter suppression, fabricated results, or invented statements attributed to electoral authorities can undermine confidence — even when voting proceeds peacefully. Information gaps during collation are inevitable, but if not filled with timely, credible communication, they are quickly occupied by speculation and deliberate falsehoods.

The National Crisis Communication Hub is designed to confront these realities. As a central coordination framework, it will monitor emerging narratives, detect misinformation early, and ensure that official communication remains accurate, timely, and consistent. By linking government agencies, security institutions, media organisations, and independent actors, the hub aims to reduce confusion and maintain public trust during sensitive periods.

A defining strength of the hub is its multi-stakeholder structure. It does not rely solely on government messaging but integrates independent verification and professional media expertise. Journalists play a crucial role in contextualising fast-moving content and preventing manipulated media from gaining legitimacy.

Trusted fact-checking platforms such as Dubawa and PRNigeria can serve as vital partners, offering independent analysis that reinforces credibility. Their involvement demonstrates that effective crisis communication depends on collaboration between state institutions and respected independent actors.

Digital platforms must also be part of the solution. Structured cooperation is essential to limiting harmful content, while respecting freedom of expression. The hub’s framework emphasises transparency, collaboration, and clearly defined intervention thresholds.

Turning the hub from concept to reality will be a key governance challenge. It requires clear protocols, defined institutional roles, and a continuous monitoring system capable of operating during elections, security incidents, and national emergencies.

Technology will play a central role. AI-assisted detection systems and advanced monitoring tools can identify false narratives early, enabling rapid response before misinformation gains traction. But technology alone is not enough. Success depends on human judgment, institutional coordination, and public trust.

As Nigeria navigates rising digital threats, the National Crisis Communication Hub — championed by NITDA in partnership with CCC and PRNigeria — represents a proactive response to a rapidly changing information landscape. By integrating technology, coordination, professional expertise, and independent verification, the initiative aims to ensure that accurate information prevails during crises.

The broader lesson is clear: in the digital age, speed without credibility is dangerous. Accuracy, transparency, and trust must move just as fast. The National Crisis Communication Hub seeks to institutionalise these principles, ensuring that Nigeria’s democracy is judged by facts — not by manufactured narratives.

Shuaib S. Agaka is a tech journalist and digital policy analyst based in Kano.

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
  • Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
Premium Times

Stay Ahead with Premium Times

Follow us on Google News and never miss breaking stories, investigations, and in-depth reporting.

Google Logo Add as a preferred source on Google
Previous Post

Gov Lawal lauds lawmaker for upgrading health centre from 10-bed to 40-bed PHC

Next Post

How AI stories quietly took over my screen — and what it means for Kannywood, By Fatimah Yusuf Usman

Premium Times

Premium Times

More News

Umar Yakubu, Executive Director of the Centre for Fiscal Transparency and Public Integrity (CeFTPI)

 All protocols obsessed, By Umar Yakubu

June 24, 2026
Zainab Suleiman Okino writes about Sule Lamido and his new biography.

NDC anti-defection law: Political loyalty or coercion?, By Zainab Suleiman Okino

June 24, 2026
Dr Chido Onumah writes about the demise of Comrade Bene Madunagu.

From partnership to progress: SDP4 and the future of UK–Nigeria security cooperation, By Chido Onumah

June 24, 2026
Mr Musikilu Mojeed writes about how the late President Jimmy Carter and former President Olusegun Obasanjo related.

National security and press freedom: Striking the right balance in a democracy, By Musikilu Mojeed

June 24, 2026
Professor Babafemi Badejo writes about JAMB 2025 and the way forward.

Re-awakening the Nigerian conscience against corruption, By Babafemi Badejo 

June 23, 2026
Zekeri Idakwo Laruba writes about the telecom tariff hikes.

Customs and FRSC reforms: Rewarding performance, sustaining progress, By Zekeri Idakwo Laruba

June 23, 2026
Leave Comment

  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Our Digital Network

  • PT Hausa
  • Election Centre
  • Human Trafficking Investigation
  • Centre for Investigative Journalism
  • National Conference
  • Press Attack Tracker
  • PT Academy
  • Dubawa
  • LeaksNG
  • Campus Reporter

Resources

  • Oil & Gas Facts
  • List of Universities in Nigeria
  • LIST: Federal Unity Colleges in Nigeria
  • NYSC Orientation Camps in Nigeria
  • Nigeria’s Federal/States’ Budgets since 2005
  • Malabu Scandal Thread
  • World Cup 2018
  • Panama Papers Game

Projects & Partnerships

  • AUN-PT Data Hub
  • #EndSARS Dashboard
  • Parliament Watch
  • Panama Papers
  • AGAHRIN
  • #PandoraPapers
  • #ParadisePapers
  • #SuisseSecrets
  • Our Digital Network
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Resources
  • Projects
  • Data & Infographics
  • DONATE

All content is Copyrighted © 2025 The Premium Times, Nigeria

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

DMCA.com Protection Status
  • Home
  • Elections
    • 2024 Ondo Governorship Election
    • 2024 Edo Governorship Election
    • Presidential & NASS
    • Gubernatorial & State House
  • News
    • Headline Stories
    • Top News
    • More News
    • Foreign
  • Investigations
  • Business
    • Gender
    • News Reports
    • Financial Inclusion
    • Analysis and Data
    • Trade Insights
    • Business Specials
    • Oil/Gas Reports
      • FAAC Reports
      • Revenue
  • Health
    • COVID-19
    • News Reports
    • Special Reports and Investigations
    • Data and Infographics
    • Health Specials
    • Features
    • Events
    • Primary Health Tracker
  • Agriculture
    • News Report
    • Research & Innovation
    • Data & Infographics
    • Special Reports/Investigations
    • Features
    • Interviews
    • Multimedia
  • Arts/Life
    • Arts/Books
    • Kannywood
    • Lifestyle
    • Music
    • Nollywood
    • Travel
  • Sports
    • Football
    • More Sports News
    • Sports Features
    • Casino
      • iGaming
      • Non AAMS
      • Online Kaszinó Magyar
      • non Gamstop casinos
      • Kasyna online
    • Games
      • كازينو اون لاين
      • Geriausi kazino internetu
      • Онлайн казино Казахстан
  • #EndSARS Dashboard
  • AUN-PT Data Hub
  • Projects
    • Panama Papers
    • Paradise Papers
    • SuisseSecrets
    • Parliament Watch
    • AGAHRIN
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • PT Hausa
  • Become a PT Insider
  • DONATE
  • About Us
  • Dubawa NG
  • Advert Rates
  • PT Jobs
  • Digital Store
  • Contact Us

All content is Copyrighted © 2025 The Premium Times, Nigeria