Nigeria jails transgender celeb for banknote 'spraying'
Standard Entertainment
By
AFP
| Apr 13, 2024
A court on Friday sentenced one of Nigeria's most famous LGBTQ celebrities, a transgender woman known as Bobrisky, to six months in jail after she was found guilty of throwing banknotes in the air at a film premiere.
The celebration with bank notes, known locally as "spraying", is common at Nigerian weddings and parties, but prohibited by law for damaging the national currency naira.
A federal judge in Lagos handed Idris Okuneye six months for mutilation of naira notes, according to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission or EFCC anti-corruption agency that handled the case.
"The act of mutilating the Naira notes has become a menace, which has continued to damage the image of the country," Justice Awogboro said, according to the EFCC statement.
"Enough of people mutilating and tampering with our currencies. It has to stop."
READ MORE
Why construction sector is vibrant in semi-arid counties
Treasury CS spells out plans to lay ground for steady economic growth
How plan to free millions in container deposits will work
How CS Mbadi's proposed new tax measures will directly affect you
Global real estate investors find sweet spot in alluring Watamu
How housing initiative changes lives of widows in Rarieda
KRA surpasses monthly target as October revenue hits Sh210b
Love for fine suits turns pharmacist into fashion designer sensation
The struggles of doing business next to learning institutions
Developer defends use of Jevanjee Gardens' land as collateral for Sh1.9b loan
Lawyers for Bobrisky could not immediately be reached for comment.
But the EFCC said in its statement Bobrisky had claimed to be unaware of the law against spraying and asked for a second chance.
The central bank says "any form of defacement of the currency is a form of ridicule on the nation" that can be punished with imprisonment or a fine.
Rights groups say LGBTQ people are regularly harassed and intimidated by the police in Nigeria, where homosexuality is punishable by 10 to 14 years in prison.
EFCC said it had based its probe on a "video of spraying and flaunting wads of new Naira notes" at a film premiere in Lagos.
Nigerian actress Oluwadarasimi Omoseyin was sentenced to six months in prison in February after she was filmed spraying and stepping on banknotes.