Less than 24 hours after the National Broadcasting
Commission banned one of his recent songs, Wo, among others, from being played
on the airwaves, popular rapper, Olamide Adedeji, has said that he never
intended to cause harm to music fans with the song.
The rapper, popularly called Olamide, on Tuesday tweeted,
“No intentions of promoting tobacco to get people killed. I love my people, I
love my country. One love, one Nigeria.”
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The NBC, on Tuesday, placed a ban on works by three of
Nigeria’s top level music artistes for an alleged violation of its rules and
regulations.
It named Olamide’s Wo and Wavi Level; a remix of Davido’s If
and 9ice’s Living Things as the culprits in a current list of banned songs and
music videos that it released to the public.
Although the commission did not give specific reasons for banning the songs, the decision may have been influenced by a recent reaction from the Federal Ministry of Health to the music video of Olamide’s new song.
Last Friday, in a message posted on Twitter, the ministry
kicked against the video of Wo, released a few days ago and described the content
as contravening the Tobacco Control Act of 2015.
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The Ministry of Health also noted that the video contained
scenes showing youths of different ages openly smoking substances believed to
be either cigarettes or narcotics and concluded that such scenes could
encourage second-hand smoking among underage children anywhere in the country.
However, this is the third time that the NBC has brought
down its hammer on a popular song by Olamide.
The last time was 2016, when two other songs by the rapper
were slammed for what the commission described as “obscene and indecent”
lyrics.
Also, before the ban on 9ice’s Living Things, the song had
been fingered as the subject of a statement by fellow rapper Falz, which urged
Nigerian musicians in general to be mindful of the kind of messages that they
passed to the public in their songs.
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Falz had appeared to be genuinely concerned about the impact
of such messages on the youth. He pointed out that artistes who saw nothing
wrong about glorifying Internet fraud, drugs and other anti-social behaviour
were not doing the society any good.
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