 Now, publisher of Aviation magazine Deli Mamoru has joined many cretis of the federal government action in banning Twitter's operation in Nigeria. According to him, NBC's order to media houses to deactivate their Twitter handles is a draconian, or is draconian rather, and against the ethical demand of journalists. He asks journalists to remain undaunted in the face of the neo-regulation. The choice of the president to join Twitter was also personal. It had nothing to do with the people of Nigeria, and he used it effectively, and I used it with him effectively, to promote him in 2015. And I still use it almost on daily basis to promote the activities of the president of the federal republic of Nigeria. I'm sure as of the time he ran into problems with Twitter, he must have acquired maybe over four million followers. I have acquired 1.6 million followers, which took me about 12 years to acquire. Nobody can ask me to wipe it out in one day. It's the tool of my job. The president has the freedom to delete himself voluntarily from Twitter, but he cannot delete 14 million others from Twitter because we don't work for the presidency, and he does not own us, and he cannot curtail our freedom from doing our jobs to the best of our abilities.