Tag: database

  • One million taxpayers now in database

    THE Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA) has said that over one million taxpayers have been captured in its tax database and they have all received their Taxpayer Identification Numbers (TIN) through personalized SMS.

    Briefing newsmen in Abuja on the activities of the FCT Internal Revenue Service (FCT-IRS) in the last one year, the Executive Chairman of the agency, Mr. Abdullahi Attah, said the taxpayer registration exercise, which commenced few months ago, had recorded significant success as one its kind in the whole Nigeria.

    He explained that before the establishment of the FCT-IRS, the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) had been the tax authority for the FCT until September 7, 2018 when the narrative changed.

    Mr. Attah explained that in view of this legacy factor and the need to achieve systematic and seamless taking over of the mandate for the administration of personal income tax, the FCTA, effective from September 7, 2018 commenced a strategic transition with FIRS.

    According to him, the essence of the strategic transition, which will last for a period of 12 months, is to enable FIRS, having been in the system for a very long time and to essentially, collaborate for effective handling over of taxpayer records, associated legacy values and platforms

  • ‘Link insurance database with FRSC to curb crime’

    ‘Link insurance database with FRSC to curb crime’

    The Federal Road Safety Corp (FRSC) has called on the Nigeria Insurers Association (NIA) to link its Nigeria Insurance Industry Database (NIID) with the Corps database’  to curb crime.

    The Corps wants insurers to make adequate enquiries about owners of vehicle before settling claims.

    The Corps Marshal, Boboye Oyeyemi, made this call at a session organised by the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) in Lagos with major consumers of insurance products and services.

    He said verifying vehicles’ ownerships will help the Corps determine if the vehicles on which insurance claims are being made are stolen, have been registered before in another state and if their drivers have committed any traffic offence or have genuine drivers’ licence.

    He said by linking NAICOM’s database with the FRSC’s, it would be easy to verify data of registered vehicles plying the roads.

    This, he stressed, would also help the insurers to reduce fake insurance policies and cost of claims, adding that consumers need to be reassured that the industry is ready to change for better and impact positively on their needs and the economy.

    He urged the operators to develop innovative products, services and experience, appropriate pricing of risks and prompt payment of associated premium and encourage good road safety practices.

    He called on the operators to embrace robust digital technology, continuously improve customers experience, robust clients enlightenments, policy information dissemination and feedback, timely claims payment and other unique virtues.

  • Ogun to update chiefs’ database

    The Ogun State Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs, Chief Jide Ojuko, has said his ministry has begun the compilation of village chiefs (baales) in the 20 local governments and 37 local council development areas (LCDAs), to update their database.

    Ojuko, in a television programme tagged: “New Dawn”, on the activities and achievements of the ministry to mark the second anniversary of the Governor Ibikunle Amosun administration, said the exercise was part of measures to stop the activities of illegal village chiefs.

    He said the newly-created LCDAs have come to stay, adding that they would facilitate the delivery of democratic dividends at the grassroots.

     

  • Akwa Ibom to develop  database for kerosene dealers

    Akwa Ibom to develop database for kerosene dealers

    The Akwa Ibom State Petroleum Products Monitoring Committee will develop a database for kerosene surface tank dealers, to trace sources of adulterated kerosene, Senior Special Assistant to the Governor on Petroleum Matters Obong Essien Esema has said.
    He spoke in Uyo at a sensitisation meeting of stakeholders on kerosene fire incidents.
    Esema, the chairman of the committee, said accreditation of surface tank dealers would identify sources of contaminated products in cases of explosion.
    “In areas where there are reported cases of kerosene adulteration or explosion, we will ensure the sale of kerosene is stopped.
    “We will ensure petroleum storage tanks, receptacles and transporting trucks are properly colour-coded,” he said.
    The governor’s aide directed dealers to paint their receptacles blue with white stripes in the middle of the tanks, to indicate they are dealers.
    He said non-compliance would result in prosecution.
    Esema, who lamented that in the last one year, 48 cases of kerosene explosions were reported, said dealers would undergo mentoring programme.
    He said the programme would require them to operate under the supervision of an independent or major marketer, to ensure quality products supply.
    Esema said the process would expose the dealers to safety measures required to make the products usage safe.
    He advised kerosene consumers not to refill their lanterns or stoves while the devices are hot.
    “It is advisable to fill a kerosene lantern and stove outdoors, using a fill spout. Kerosene should be stored away from heat or ignition sources.”
    Speaking on behalf of the dealers, Mrs. Lucy Eyo thanked the committee for organising the meeting.
    She said the dealers would cooperate with the government to curb kerosene explosion.
    Eyo said dealers would comply with safety measures and appealed for regular supply of kerosene through authorised sources.
    She said no dealer would patronise unknown sources if the product was available through authorised channels.

  • ‘Only 30% of investors’ information in CSCS database’

    The Managing Director,  Central Securities Clearing System (CSCS), Mr Kyari Bukar, has urged investors to ensure that they complete all the necessary information in fulfilling the Know your Customer (KYC) requirements for the e-dividend registration.

    Speaking yesterday at the Town Hall Meeting on e-Dividend organised by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in Abuja, he said as at the last quarter of last year,  CSCS data of all investor showed that less than 30 per cent of Nigerians had complete KYC. He said when investors comply with the directive, it would ensure smooth operations in the market and ease stress encountered by investors.

    He said:  “Seven out of every 10 people in Nigeria have not yet completed the information that is necessary for us to say yes this account belongs to this person.

    “Once you fill this information right, what you will get is ease of life because you will get alert when necessary.’’

    He commended SEC’s efforts in developing initiatives that would ensure increased investor confidence in the capital market stressing that “there is no better way for an investor to have confidence in the market than the two initiative of e-divided and the direct cash settlement by the SEC.”

  • Oyo to generate database for SMEs

    Oyo State Government has restated its readiness to generate a database for all Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs), in the state in order to assist in the development of the sector.

    The Executive Secretary, Bureau of Investment Promotion and Public, Private Partnership, Yinka Fatoki made this known at a meeting between the inter-governmental technical committees facilitating the generation of database for SMEs in the state and the Heads of Local Government Administrations of six local councils that have been short-listed out for the pilot exercise of the database generation.

    He said, a pretext survey in six council areas would begin January 18, adding that one enumerators and two supervisors will administer ten questionnaires in each of the six council areas that have been selected to SMEs. The selected council areas are Ibadan North East, Ibadan South West, Iwajowa, Egbeda, Surulere, Ibarapa North.

    He said the enumerators and supervisors will write a report from the outcome of their survery on their observation.

  • Expert calls for database on job creation in Lagos

    Ex-President, Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN), Debo Famuyibo has stressed the need for database on job creation as well as data on the jobless in Lagos State.

    Speaking yesterday during a public hearing on a bill to create Employment Trust Fund by the Lagos State government, he said the data base should cover both the formal and informal sector of the state’s economy.

    Famuyibo observed in section eight of the proposed law that there should be accurate database for the Fund, saying that would make it sustainable.

    He spoke at a stakeholders forum on the proposed law tagged: ‘Employment Trust Fund Bill, 2015’ at Lateef Jakande Auditorium, Alausa Ikeja.

    He said that section nine which is meant for the sources of fund should be explicit, saying: “It is important to be clear on percentage from companies, employees and that dedicated percentage should be specified from payees.”

    He explained that some other sources that should be tapped to get fund included unclaimed dividends which according to him, “is an honey pot sitting untouched.”

    Speaking on the occasion, the Executive Secretary of CIBN, Anthony Arabameh said there should be adequate database on employment to achieve the desired result.

  • Harmonising database will enhance e-governance, says Computer Society

    The Nigeria Computer Society (NCS) has said the harmonisation of the national database is a right and fundamental step towards a functional e-government system.

    In a statement on Sunday in Lagos, Prof. Sola Aderounmu, the NCS president, said it would assist in the fight against crime, when agencies draw data from the same database.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that President Muhammadu Buhari recently directed the Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) to harmonise the biometric data.

    The statement noted that the directive was imperative, considering the huge cost of biometric exercises.

    It said biometric exercises included the cost of personnel,  storage of acquired data and cost of making such data available.

    The statement also said e-government services would bring together the government, the governed, civil society, professional bodies and other stakeholders.

    It recalled that the NCS, at its 2013 general meeting, canvassed that e-government, when properly deployed, would deliver optimisation of service.

    The statement said quality service would aid the attainment of Vision 20:20:20.

    It stressed the need to evolve the technology and framework for storing, protecting and making available data, while safeguarding the privacy of citizens’ Personal Identifiable Information (PII).

     

  • Our Girls; Hurray: Malaria vaccine & No polio; INEC Voter Register as Police ID Database ?

    Our Girls are still missing since April 15th 2014. The President is talking ‘dialogue’ with Boko Haram using perhaps the Sultan, the Emir of Kano and Conflict Resolution experts like Professor Albert. It must be difficult for the President, or Nigerians to contemplate negotiation with malignant evil. Who dare sit with people who may personally have sent suicide bomber children or who may blow the negotiation table up at the opening ceremony or a celebrated ‘Peace at last Federal –Boko Haram Agreement?

    July 2015 is ‘Wow’! Our Maternal Mortality Rate is 600+/100,000. Shame on African media for neglecting the ignorant citizen’s need for ‘LIFE SKILL’ knowledge and not doing more non-commercial 15 -30sec adverts for medical and social ignorance elimination! Shame on African governments for tiny health budgets! A million ‘hurrays’ for Nigeria’s  ‘ONE YEAR WITHOUT POLIO’ thanks to Rotary International, WHO, UNICEF and local partners and the vicious murder of polio vaccine health workers. Five million ‘hurrays’ for the new GSK MALARIA VACCINE to end malaria in childhood with funds from Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and others WHILE AFRICA’S LEADERS STOLE 50% OF THE BUDGET and under-budgeted health. Africa countries, except South Africa, offered about zero ‘Medical Research Grants’ in Nigeria’s and Africa’s Budgets.

    Over the last 30 years, Nigeria has made several very expensive, multibillion naira, and corruption riddled, attempts at getting Nigerians onto database.  I personally have been forced into five or six databases. Any more? The Nigeria Police Service or Force has no access to or has not asked for or has no interest in using any or all existing databases as a template for a NIGERIA NATIONAL FINGER AND FACE PRINT DATABASE IN 2015. Yet it is over 120 years after fingerprints were identified as an essential tool for crime investigations and made famous by fictional characters such as the literary private detective invented by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle –‘Sheer Luck’ Holmes, I mean Sherlock Holmes. Since 1892 when the first case was prosecuted, our Nigerian Police ignore and disregard obvious fingerprints and foot prints at ‘the scene of crime’. The Nigeria Police does not even set up a standard Crime Scene Protocol cordon and photography as seen in every international crime film. Nigerians, from watching CIS, NCIS etcetera, know what a normal Crime Laboratory or Forensic Lab looks like in sophisticated scientific content, delivery of spectacular clues and interpretation by genius police laboratory technicians. These are neglected jobs for hundreds of graduates. No matter how far-fetched, the cases depicted in these films ‘based on real life criminality’ appear to be, the science is real and operational in other countries. Why are victims of crime denied such rights to scientific investigation in Nigeria? Finger prints and face prints, photographs, are not nuclear physics. They are the simple applications of basic science and the use of widely available cameras, even phone cameras and are the right of victims and their families to justice.

    The largest database of adult Nigerians is not in the Passport Offices or FRSC Drivers Licence Records or BVN or State ID or National ID or the cell phone database or whatever other ID that has been cooked up in order to perpetrate the fraudulent extraction of funds. The largest, most expensive, recent and probably the most authentic database is the INEC database. This can be upgraded and modified by compulsory reporting of deaths and routine crosschecking. Even double registration does not matter.

    The Presidency and/or the ‘changed’ National Assembly (NASS), if it changes, must initiate ‘ID DATABASE LAWS’ authorising and mandating the Police, EFCC and ICPC full access to state, Federal Finger/Face ID databases on routine request and corporate employees databases on a judge’s warrant authorisation. Of course there is some access by police to the massive cell phone database already. The police must not continue the apparent collaboration with crime by sabotaging or underutilising this available database. Building immediately on this requires a ‘change’ instruction to all Police formations and Police stations that ALL SUSPECTS MUST BE IDed PROPERLY WITH FINGERPRINTS, PHOTOGRAPHS, FRONT VIEW AND SIDE VIEW-THE MUG SHOT- AND ANY MARKS OR TATTOOS NOTED. Even the ear is a print. With a simple laptop computer or a photo camera, available from any big cell phone company, this information can be recorded and forwarded by internet, email or even WhatsApp or Instagram to a new Nigerian language password cyber-secure state, REGIONAL AND FEDERAL POLICE ID DATABASE run by serial teams of NYSC wiz-kids and cross-referenced with the INEC database and others as needed.

    The facilities to bring the Nigeria Police into 2015 already exist. We only need to harvest, harness and direct them to reach Nigeria’s ‘change’ policing goals.

    We can create a Police database and add a FOOT SECTION as many African thieves operate barefoot. It only requires the will of the Police itself to grow and ‘change’. There are today high enough quality phone cameras in the possession of every DPO in every single police station. Let them initiate the needed ‘change’. The Federal Government can get a database designed by patriotic Nigerians in IT in a week. In the unlikely event that it is not satisfactory, ‘for security reasons’, Nigeria can mistakenly spend good scarce foreign exchange on free Open Source or expensive Microsoft and other ‘secure’ Police packages or use any internationally acceptable existing Police format for interchanges from UK’s CID, INTERPOL, America’s FBI, the New York’s ‘Finest’ or EUROPOL.

    ‘ We can create a Police database and add a FOOT SECTION as many African thieves operate barefoot. It only requires the will of the Police itself to grow and ‘change’. There are today high enough quality phone cameras in the possession of every DPO in every single police station. Let them initiate the needed ‘change’’

  • EFCC arraigns two for hacking into Enterprise Bank’s database

    EFCC arraigns two for hacking into Enterprise Bank’s database

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) yesterday arraigned two men for allegedly attempting to hack into the database of Enterprise Bank Plc.

    The suspects are Ola Lawal, Abass Ajide while the third person Olumide Kayode was said to be at large.

    The defendants were arraigned on a four count charge  bordering on conspiracy to defraud, felony, stealing and forgery before the court presided over by Justice Lateef Lawal-Akapo.

    According to the prosecution, Seidu Atteh, the suspects conspired to defraud Enterprise Bank by hacking into the bank’s network with their laptop, router model and grabber/key logger to obtain the password of key operations staff through the Central Processing Unit (CPU).

    He said the defendants aimed to access the network of the bank without authority to conduct fraudulent transactions.

    Atteh alleged that the defendants wanted to access the CPU to conduct fraudulent transactions and transfer unauthorised money into other accounts.

    He also alleged that the second defendant, Ajibade forged a Certificate of National Diploma purportedly issued by The Polytechnic of Ibadan to one Ajibade Abass Rotimi with matriculation number 029511.

    He said the offences were committed on July 10, last year within Ikeja Judicial Division.

    According to him, the offences are contrary to Sections 323, 361(1)(e), and 409 and punishable under Sections 285(1) and (363)(1) of   the Criminal Laws No. 11, Lagos State of Nigeria, 2011.

    When the charges were read, the defendants pleaded not guilty to the four-count charge.

    The court did not take their plea as Justice Lawal-Akapo ordered them to be remanded in Kirikiri Maximum Prison, Lagos pending when their application would be heard.

    He subsequently adjourned the matter till October 26, this year.