
Nigerian TikToker jailed for ‘making it rain' with naira bills at party, must now campaign against currency abuse online
Murja Kunya, a TikToker from northern Nigerian city of Kano with more than a million followers was sentenced by a federal high court in the city after pleading guilty to the offence, court documents show.
Justice Simon Amobeda gave Kunya an option of 50,000 naira (RM140) fine and gave an order appointing her as an online campaigner against naira abuse using her huge following on social media.
Kunya, a 26-year old social media influencer, has earned notoriety for serially running afoul with the law for her online videos deemed immoral by authorities in the predominantly Muslim conservative city.
Her offensive videos led to her several arrests and arraignment in court by the Sharia police called Hisbah.
She was arrested by Nigeria's anti-graft agency, the EFCC, in January after an online video showed her spraying naira notes in a hotel room in the city, an act prohibited under Nigerian law.
The social media influencer was granted administrative bail by the EFCC but absconded and failed to appear in court for arraignment.
She was rearrested in March, after weeks of hide-and-seek with EFCC operatives and arraigned in court where she pleaded guilty.
Celebrating with bank notes, known as 'spraying', is common at Nigerian weddings and parties, but prohibited by law for insulting the national naira currency.
Since last year the EFCC has been enforcing a 2007 law outlawing the abuse and mutilation of the naira, while critics say the law is being selectively enforced.
Several celebrities have been arrested and taken to court under the law which provides for up to six months jail term and a 50,000 naira fine. — AFP

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