
Ghana approved a new law in February 2021 that seeks to punish those who publish indecent images, particularly of children and women, online.
The new law, part of the country’s Cybersecurity Act 2020, aims to make it more difficult to take, circulate, or publish naked and sexual images and videos of people.
Persons who circulate naked images and videos of others or themselves may face fines ranging from $5200 to $10,000 under the new law (GH 30,000 to GH60,000).
They may also be sentenced to five, ten to fifteen, or twenty-five years in prison.
This law has been cited by social media users as being used to deal with Shugatiti for sharing her own nudes on social media.
Shugatiti, they believe, should be used as a scapegoat to serve as a strong deterrent to others who have secret plans to share their nudes online for fame and attention.
Only a few hours ago, the nudist and socialite willingly shared her own atopa video on Snapchat before deleting it after it went viral.
Nobody knows what she hoped to accomplish with the online publication of the video, but she clearly only wanted it to trend.
The sex video has since spawned a hot internet debate, with thousands of netizens expressing opposing viewpoints.
Perhaps the calls for laws to deal with her will be taken into account by the appropriate authorities.
We can’t post it here due to the new law. You can search for it on google, Telegram, or twitter.