Nigerian girls have turned social media apps designed for connecting
with new people and staying in touch friends, family and acquaintances
to a hub for digital prostitution. When Zuckerberg designed Facebook or
when Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger built Instagram from a co-working
space in San Francisco, when Sean Rad invented Tinder or when the trio
of Evan Spiegel, Bobby Murphy, and Reggie Brown created Snapchat, they
probably didn’t envisage that their apps would become platforms for
prostitutes to advertise their goods and services in Nigeria.
People
who return to Nigeria for holidays are often shocked when they discover
that they can’t get dates or meet decent people to start friendships
with on Nigerian Tinder. A huge percentage of the girls you’d see there
are for “strictly hookups or massage with happy ending” as some boldly
indicate on their bio’s. It’s really embarrassing! According to them,
when you meet a girl/guy on Tinder overseas, it’s never for sex, it can
lead to sex but you’re very sure you matched with a person with a
job/profession who genuinely wants to meet new people, make new friends
or go out on dates. There are different apps/websites strictly for
meeting with prostitutes.
According to Britannica, sex has
always been one of the few pleasures of the poor and oppressed. Nigeria
is the poverty capital of the world. Do the math! While sex is part of
normal human behavior, prostitution on the other hand is frowned on
morally and legally in Nigeria and has now evolved from the road side
and brothels to social media apps. An unofficial survey revealed that
the Transportation Network Industry in Lagos and Abuja (Uber and Taxify)
generates 80% of it revenue from 8pm to 6am (with numerous instances
where these females offer sex acts to drivers as payment for their ride
fares #sexforrides).
It is left up to you to determine whether
you support their lifestyle and professional choices or not. What should
be a cause for concern is that the money these girls make from digital
prostitution is tax-free. Our government is broke! Looking for loans
here and there while we have millions of young females raking in an
average of 200,000 Naira on a monthly basis tax free (using Lagos State
and Abuja as our reference points) with an average income of 20,000
Naira per night.
In more developed countries you are obligated
by law to pay your personal income tax regardless of your occupation.
Businesses regardless of size and revenue across the country pay taxes,
why shouldn’t these people pay taxes too? They can be classified as
business owners because there is a monetary payment in exchange for a
service(s) in multiple transactions. The sex-tax would be difficult to
enforce because prostitution is illegal in Nigeria and social media
space is simply uncontrollable. However, if the government is willing to
generate more internal generated revenue this would be a gold mine! In
the words of Nelson Mandela, “It always seems impossible until it’s
done.”
Sadly, in Nigeria governance and religious doctrines go
hand in hand! Nigerians are not objective with issues such as this, they
are extremely sentimental. Too many revenue streams are ignored because
of religious morality and laws fueled by religious morality. Nigeria
might be the capital of hypocrisy in the world.
Fegor Okonedo
IG/Twitter: @fegurgreen
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