DSS orders Sowore to retract harmful Tinubu tweet in one week

FG terminates treason charge against Sowore

The Department of State Services (DSS) has given the former presidential candidate under the African Action Congress (AAC) and pro-democracy activist, Omoyele Sowore, one week ultimatum to retract what it described as a “false, malicious, and inciting” social media post against President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

TheNewsGuru.com(TNG) reports that the DSS, in a letter dated September 7, 2025, accused Sahara Reporters publisher of making “criminal and derogatory” remarks against the President in a post on X (formerly Twitter) on August 26, 2025.

The agency warned that failure to comply with its demands would force it to “explore all lawful means” to protect national security and public order.

Sowore had in the post described President Tinubu as a “criminal,” accusing him of lying to Nigerians after the President reportedly claimed in Brazil that corruption no longer existed under his administration.

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The DSS, through its Director of Legal Services, Uwem Davies, said the remarks had sparked anger among citizens and could “incite public disturbance, disunity, and even insurrection.”

“Your choice of words in the description of the President are false, malicious, and capable of inciting public disturbance, disunity, and breakdown of law and order,” the DSS said in the letter addressed to Sowore.

“These statements are to say the least capable of causing insurrection, as they are odious, repugnant, derogatory, and uncomplimentary towards a person occupying the highest office of this country.”

The security agency directed Sowore to retract the post immediately using the same X platform and with the same prominence as the original post.

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It further asked him to publish a public apology in at least two widely read national newspapers and two television stations with national coverage.

“Make an immediate and unequivocal retraction of the false and repugnant post through the same platform and with the same prominence as the initial post; publish a public apology in at least two national dailies and two television stations with national spread; and send your representation within one week of receipt of this letter,” the letter read in part.

The DSS also copied the United States Embassy in Abuja, suggesting the matter had drawn the attention of diplomatic circles, given Sowore’s dual residency in Nigeria and the United States.

The secret service reminded Sowore, who has consistently criticised successive Nigerian governments, that individuals seeking to play leading roles in the country’s democratic space must exercise restraint and a sense of responsibility in both speech and action.

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