Tag: NCC

  • NCC begins voice termination rate review

    NCC begins voice termination rate review

    The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) said yesterday it has commenced the process for the review of voice termination rates for telecommunication industry in the country.

    Its Executive Vice Chairman, Prof Umar Garba Danbatta, said at the Stakeholders’ Forum on the Cost Based Study for the Determination of Mobile Voice Termination Rate for telecom industry that the review has become imperative due to changes in the industry since the last exercise in 2013.

    He told industry players and other stakeholders who attended the Forum at the Commission’s Head Office in Abuja that the move would make the industry achieve full competition and effective regulation by providing a level playing ground for all participants.

    Prof Danbatta said: “ Since the last determination, the Nigerian communication market has witnessed tremendous growth in both subscriber numbers as well as traffic volumes. Changes in available technologies, (2G, 2.5G, 3G and 4G) and other network elements, including global financial markets  have an impact such as the cost of capital.

    “The scale of changes will inevitably affect the unit cost of providing services including interconnection and may lead to differences between regulated interconnection rates and underlying costs which in turn may result in differences between on-net and off-net retail tariffs.

    “It is very important that we ensure that interconnection services are not only fairly priced and non-discriminative but should reflect the cost of providing such services in the market.

    “It is in this regard that the Commission has decided to review the rates set in 2013 determination in the light of the current market realities.”

    According to Danmbatta, consistent with the Commission’s principle of ensuring participatory regulation, the stakeholders forum was convened not only to formally introduce the project consultant to the industry stakeholders, but also to kick—start the project.

    He emphasised that “the supply of industry statistical data is most crucial to the success of determining appropriate interconnection termination rates for the telecommunications industry.”

    He said NCC has the obligation to create a level playing field for all operators, noting that “in line with international practices, the commission shall ensure that interconnect rates reflect the cost of termination on the networks.

  • NCC impounds registration machines, arrest three agents in Abuja

    The Nigerian Communications Commission, NCC, Wednesday raided the shops and kiosks of agents of telecommunications companies engaged in indiscriminate registration of SIM cards in Abuja metropolis and its environs.

    Three operators were arrested while about seven registration machines were confiscated by security agents who accompanied officials of NCC on the assignment.

    Alhaji Salisu Abdu, head of enforcement unit of NCC told journalist that the raid was justified following series of warnings issued to the agents on the illegality of their actions.

    He insisted that those arrested would pay the stipulated fine of five million naira for the offense.

    His words: “The purpose of this exercise is to stop indiscriminate registering of SIM cards by agents of telcos. You are all aware that NCC issued a directive to all mobile operators to from February 1, 2017 provide a controlled environment for registration of SIM cards. This controlled environment means a permanent structure; a structure that can be traced, a location that can be identified and also that the registration agent manning this centres are expected to have identity as well.

    “Today, in view of the fact that deadline has ended on February 2, the NCC team is going to ensure that no any agents are doing the registration outside the controlled environment. We went to Gwanripa Gate and some other places around the place. All the three we arrested today were doing the registration in an uncontrolled environment; they were doing that under umbrellas and in kiosks.

    “A controlled environment must have seven features:  it must be clearly delineated for that purpose, it must be a permanent structure; a building, it must have the logo of the operator and others.

    “It is not our responsibility to carry out publicity on this matter. It is the responsibility of the operators to do that because they actually engaged the agents. They should have told them what we have directed them to do.  Adequate time has been given to the operators. The directive has been given since November 2016 that is barely four months.

    “It is not for the operators to arrest these agents, it is the work of NCC to carry out the enforcement of its regulations and directives. We must ensure that those who breach the directives should face the law.

    “As at the moment we have arrested three violators and seven registration machines are impounded. So further investigation would be conducted by the Nigeria Police and I believe through that we will able to trace the dealers who have assigned the agents.

    “Contradiction of the directive would attract N5million per day and as long as you refuse to pay the N5m you be incurring addition N500,000 per day”

  • NCC begins voice termination rate review – Danbatta

    NCC begins voice termination rate review – Danbatta

    The Nigerian Communications Commission, NCC, said Wednesday  that it has commenced the process for the review of mobile voice termination rates for telecommunication industries in the country.

    Its Executive Vice Chairman, Professor Umar Garba Danbatta, said at the Stakeholders’ Forum on the Cost Based Study for the Determination of Mobile Voice Termination Rate for telecom industry that the review has become imperative due to changes in the industry since the last exercise in 2013.

    He told industrial players and other stakeholders who attended the Forum at the Commission’s Head Office in Abuja that the move would make the industry achieve full competition and effective regulation by providing a level playing ground for all participants.

    Professor Danbatta said: “Since the last determination, the Nigerian Communication Market has witnessed tremendous growth in both subscriber numbers as well as traffic volumes. Changes in available technologies, (2G, 2.5G, 3G and 4G) and other network elements, including global financial markets which have an impact such as the cost of capital.

    “The scale of changes will inevitably affect the unit cost of providing services including interconnection and may lead to differences between regulated interconnection rates and underlying costs which in turn may result in differences between on-net and off-net retail tariffs.

    “It is very important that we ensure that interconnection services are not only fairly priced and non-discriminative but should reflect the cost of providing such services in the market.

    “It is in this regard that the Commission has decided to review the rates set in 2013 Determination in the light of the current market realities”.

    Consistent with the Commission’s principle of ensuring participatory regulation, this initial Stakeholders Forum is held not only to formally introduce the project consultant to the industry stakeholders, but also to kick—start the project, Professor Danbatta added.

    He emphasized that “the supply of industry statistical data is most crucial to the success of determining appropriate interconnection termination rates for the telecommunications industry.”

    He said NCC has the obligation to create a level playing field for all operators, noting that “in line with international practices, the commission shall ensure that interconnect rates reflect the cost of termination on the networks.”

    Justifying the review, professor Danbatta further argued that “the study provides the opportunity to thoroughly examine the emergence of grey market activities in the telecommunication industry in Nigeria such as call refilling, call masking and sim-box fraud as a result of the introduction of an interim International Termination Rate (ITR) for inbound international traffic.”

    He said the Commission has engaged Messrs PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (Pwc) to among other things carry out an impact assessment on the subsisting interconnect regime; identify shortfalls on the subsisting interconnection rate regime and provide workable solutions.

    Others are to determine if there is need to have different termination rate for national/domestic and international traffic; determine the mobile termination rate for voice services using appropriate cost modelling techniques for new entrant(s)/ small operators and existing/big operators.

    And also to determine the appropriate basis for glide path if necessary; develop a suitable definition of a new entrant(s)/ small operator to enjoy the benefits of asymmetric rates; determine the cost per minute session for the use of unstructured supplementary service data.

    Professor Danbatta further added that the job of the accounting firm would include to review ITR in other jurisdiction with similar socio-economic environment with Nigeria and its implication for the determination of ITR in Nigeria.

    And to determine if necessary the inbound international termination rate taking into consideration relevant socio-economic and technical factors using appropriate cost modelling techniques and develop measures to reduce or eliminate grey markets in the telecommunications industry in Nigeria.

  • NCC: Technology bedrock of digital economy

    Technological innovation is the bedrock of digital economies. They are powered by the science of growth, hence they stand the test of time, the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), has said.

    Its Director Public Affairs, Mr Tony  Ojobo, who spoke at the General Meeting of the Nigeria Computer Society (NCS), Abuja branch at the weekend, said technology sets the pace for human civilisation, boosts development and creates wealth.

    According to him, investments in technology and innovations are the reason the top four most capitalised companies in the world are where they are. They include Microsoft, apple, Google and Facebook.

    Narrowing his presentation to Nigeria, Ojobo said telephone subscription stood at 154.5million as at December last year while teledensity is 110.38 per cent.

    Internet subscription is 92million as at December last year, while broadband penetration is 21 per cent as estimated by ITU/UNESCO Broadband Commission. Broadband target by 2018 as estimated in the National Broadband Plan is 30 per cent.

    Africa has an internet penetration of 28.7per cent of 3.7billion global internet users. Nigeria is nosing 48 per cent penetration with about 92 million internet users. Facebook users stand at 16 million while Facebook is now worth over $348 billion, overtaking ExxonMobil as the fourth global most capitalised company.

    There has been a forecast that by 2020, 20.8 billion devices will be connected and collating data. Digital technology is promoting astonishing interaction among citizens and between citizens and the state.

    He said more political debates are enabled thereby boosting the expression of civil liberties. Politicians increasingly deploy social media to reach their constituents. Only recently the Lagos State government launched a portal to enhance interaction between it and the citizens.

    On the application of digital technology to expansion of democracy, the Arab Spring, particularly the events at Tahrir Square in Egypt readily comes to bear, he recalled. The 2015 Nigerian elections gave an insight into what technology can also do. The Referendum in the UK to decide the country’s fate in the European Union (EU) and the last presidential elections in the US were all shaped by the use of social media networks enabled by the Internet.

    Ojobo explained how digital economy and opportunities for business and economic growth came about.

    He said the internet has accounted for over 10 per cent GDP over a period of 15 years in the G8 countries (China, Brazil, India, Sweden and South Korea) according to Mckinsey global institute.

  • NCC seeks NSDC’s partnership to end vandalism

    The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) is seeking partnership with the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) to put an end to incessant vandalism of telecoms infrastructure.

    NCC Executive Commissioner (Stakeholders Management) Mr. Sunday Dare, who spoke at the NCC Headquarters in Abuja, during a meeting of the two organisations, said the meeting was a follow up to the previous one hosted by the National Security Adviser (NSA) Maj- Gen Babagana Monguno (rtd) in December last year for both agencies to deliberate on workable ways to protect critical national infrastructure.

    Mr Dare, who represented the Executive Vice Chairman (EVC), Prof. Umar Danbatta, at the meeting, said it was in line with the previous meeting where the  NCC expressed its willingness to work with the NSCDC on ways to protect telecoms sector critical national infrastructures such as base transmission stations (BTS), optic fibre cables (OFC), masts and others.

    He added that the partnership will also address the activities of criminals that trade on pre-registered Subscribers Identification Module (SIM) cards because of its security implications.

    According to the Executive Commissioner, although the NSCDC men have been manning NCC Emergency Communications Centres (ECC), before now, “we are sure that you will support in the protection of the critical infrastructure on the directive of the NSA”.

    NSCDC Acting Deputy Commandant-General (Protection of Critical Infrastructure), Mr. Amos Andekein, said the agency will replicate the success it recorded in protecting oil and gas pipelines nationwide in the telecoms sector.

    He explained that protection of critical national infrastructure was part of the NSCDC core mandate as enshrined in its Act. “We are therefore, willing to do just that for the telecommunications sector like we have been doing for the oil and gas sector, protecting oil pipelines and (and ensuring safe) maritime operations,” he said.

    He explained, however, that it will require a lot of enlightenment for people to know the dangers of vandalising telecom equipment and the laws against it.

    Head, Legal and Regulatory Services (NCC), Mrs. Yetunde Akinloye said the laws were being fine-tuned with a view to having successful prosecution of defaulters.

    A private member bill is in the offing and when passed, prosecution will be a lot easier, Akinloye added.

    Assistant Commandant-General, Mr. Jonathan Iyogho, said the NSCDC was willing to cooperate with the NCC in protecting critical national infrastructure, adding that collaboration is a key element in achieving a success.

    NSCDC Legal Adviser, Mrs. Yemisi Salako, said to prosecute arrested offenders, the offence has to be known to the law and above all, there must be witnesses willing to testify.

    When NSCDC officials make arrest, prosecution is done by the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation, she maintained.

  • NCC, Danbatta and public intellectualism

    Distinct commonalities often stand out in bold relief about most academics and intellectual heavyweights who find themselves in public service. They are usually transformational, out-of-box thinkers who swiftly roll out comprehensive blueprints, which encapsulate their vision and mission for new challenges.  Exuding supreme confidence is another trait they share, which perhaps explains why they could be daring in decision-making. Nonetheless, they won’t shy away from chipping in quality contribution to public discourse – which their intellectual cutting-edge enables them to do rather effortlessly.

    Prof Charles Chukuma Soludo probably shocked the nation’s banking industry with his audacious consolidation policy. Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi’s out-of-box strategy provided the shield we badly needed as a nation during the 2007 global financial meltdown. Akinwumi Adesina boldly attempted to revolutionise our agricultural sector with his business model. And, Malam Nasir el Rufai was fearless both as the Director-General of Bureau of Public Enterprise (BPE) and as the Minister the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    However, while Soludo as the number one banker in the country chose to consolidate, el  Rufai as the man spearheading the privatisation of the nation’s public utilities was busy unbundling the behemoth energy corporation that was supplying meagre amount of megawatts of electricity to the giant of Africa. He also midwifed the telecom sector reform we currently enjoy.

    Yet, we now have Prof Umar Garba Danbatta, the Executive Vice-Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), who announced his entry into the telecom industry with yet another big-bang decision.  No sooner had President Muhammadu Buhari appointed him than he wielded the big regulatory stick in the nation’s telecom sector. He would follow that with his 8-Point Agenda, a roadmap of aligned strategic management policy of NCC.

    Interestingly – like Soludo or other intellectual giants mentioned above – that Danbatta has managed to mix his time-consuming assignment at the NCC with public intellectualism is something worth underlining. Indeed, it is not only the nation’s broadband that is witnessing a quantum leap in terms of expansion under Danbatta’s leadership of the NCC – growing from 10% to close to 21% as revealed by ITU-ENESCO Broadband Commission for Sustainable Development, but  his contribution to public discourse cannot go unnoticed.

    Danbatta received a standing ovation of respected colleagues last year when he presented a lecture titled, “The National Broadband Plan as a Catalyst for Social and Economic Transformation: The NCC Mandate”, at the Nigerian Academy of Engineering.

    It wasn’t the first time though that he would receive this kind of appreciation.  It is on record that the professor of telecommunications engineering was the first NCC boss to address the executive course of National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies (NIPSS). Just last week, Danbatta wowed the academic community of University of Nigeria Nsukka after joining the league of eminent Nigerians like former President Olusegun Obasanjo to deliver the convocation symposium of the revered varsity. He spoke on the Role of ICT Infrastructure in Tertiary Education in Nigeria: NCC Intervention.

    However, it was much more than what the title suggests.  Danbatta referenced the works of renowned economists and social scientists to buttress points. He would intermittently quote from Joseph Eugene Stiglitz, Rodrick or Joseph Schumpeter.  Indeed, while the presentation was generously spiced intellectually, in terms of statistics and academic citations, Danbatta chose to draw the curtain on it with a clarion call for all and sundry to begin to see the role of digital transformation beyond the realm of statistical figures churned out by the industry.

    “We talk about the benefits of ICT and we normally do this by dishing out e-readiness indicators. We say broadband penetration is 21%, internet penetration 97%. All these are ICT-readiness indicators that do not tell the entire story,” he observed.

    He went on, “We can go beyond that and explain how ICTs have impacted to provide shared and sustainable prosperity; how ICTs have succeeded in reducing poverty; how they improve learning and make the society more open, more mobile and cohesive. And, above all, how they encourage the economy to be more competitive and innovative. These are the ends of digital transformation and not the input-output figures we normally reel out.”

    For Professor Danbatta, “It is in Nigeria’s national interest to harness potentials that exist in the information-driven age through the deployment and exploitation of ICT to facilitate socio-economic development and improvement of the human condition.”

    He said the Less Developed Countries (LDCs) are now grappling with a broadband divide in addition to infrastructure, knowledge and information divides. “Of the world’s over five billion broadband subscriptions, North America and European Union control over 50% while South America and Sub-Saharan Africa, where Nigeria belongs,  account for only 3% of this global share,” he lamented.

    Yet, as Danbatta continues to use the platforms of different public forums to spray us generously with his intellectual perfume, we must not lose sight of the fact that the industry he superintends over has also shown remarkable performance during his tenure.

    Figures from the National Bureau of Statistics (BPE) shows that in spite of the challenging waters of economic downturn the nation is waddling through, the telecom sector was, last year, contributing between N 1.4 trillion to N1.5 trillion to the GDP, the highest it has recorded in its history.  The industry is hoping that the trend will be sustained for a very long time. And it has Danbatta who is not short both the passion and the blueprint to ensure that.

     

    • Musa, Special Adviser (Media) to the EVC-NCC wrote in from Abuja.
  • NCC insists on open access to information

    The Nigerian Copyright Commis-sion (NCC) has restated the commitment of the federal government in amending the copyright law in a response to the opportunities and potential of open access in a digital technological by driven world. Mr. Michael Akpan who is Head of Regulatory Department at the NCC made this known at a stakeholder’s forum on open access organised by Creative Commons Nigeria in partnership with the Nigerian Institute of Advance Studies (NIAS) in Lagos.

    Justifying the need for the amendment, he said the policy thrust will reflect new realities all aimed at strengthening the copyright regime in Nigeria as well as enhance the competitiveness of its creative industries in a digital and knowledge-based global economy. Akpan further noted that the new draft bill for the protection of intellectual properties in Nigeria expanded the scope of limitations and exceptions to make allowances for more free uses of creative works particularly in the context of educational and non commercial activities.

    “Nigeria is a developing country at the throes of maximising its huge human and natural resource. One of the roads to achieving this is the platform provided by open access which provides free online access to information which anyone may require,” he said.

    Echoing similar sentiments, the Director General of Nigerian Institute of Advance Studies, Professor Aedeji Adekunle, identified infrastructural deficit, inadequate man power and knowledge gap as an impediment to open access governance in Nigeria. He said though infrastructure development is necessary, there is need to also set proper rules of engagement for operators in the sector.

    Also speaking at the event, the Technical Lead, Creative Common Nigeria, Kayode Yusuf, said that the forum is set to create awareness and support for open access among stakeholders in Nigeria.

    “We will continue to engage the various stakeholders and entrenched the merits of open in addition to the fact that it is in perfect alignment with digital technology as the principal means of knowledge production and dissemination today,” he said.

  • ‘NCC contributed N1.4tr to economy’

    The Chief Executive Officer of Nigeria Communication Commission (NCC), Prof. Umar Danbatta, said the commission has contributed more than N1.4 trillion to the economy since its inception.

    Danbatta said this when he delivered the 46th Convocation Lecture of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka,  on Thursday, the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports.

    He said that policymakers needed to leverage on the potential of the Information Communication and Technology (ICT) sector to grow the economy.

    The NCC chief executive officer said the sector in recent times had shown massive potential and would be the needed elixir to turn the economy around for good.

    He challenged policymakers to facilitate the adoption of ICT infrastructure in addressing issues in agriculture, health, energy and education sectors.

    “It is in the interest of the country to harness potential that exist in the information-driven age to facilitate socio-economic development,” he said.

     

  • NCC laments low patronage of DND service

    The National Communication Commission [NCC] has regretted that only  one per cent of mobile subscribers patronise the Do Not Disturb[DND] service while the rest of the subscribers go about complaining of receiving unsolicited calls.

    “The agency would embark on massive education and awareness campaign to ensure that at least 50 per cent of subscribers in the country would make use of the service instead of complaining,” said the Executive Chairman, NCC, Professor Umar Danbatta.

    Speaking recently in Abuja at the opening of a training for academics on the procedures and opportunities available at the international telecommunications union, Professor Danbatta promised that the agency will focus on customer satisfaction in 2017.

    He reiterated that NCC will impose a fine of N5 million on mobile operators for each subscriber who continues to receive unsolicited text messages despite opting out for through the DND scheme provided by mobile operators.

    He said for any subscriber who had chosen the ‘Do Not Disturb’ option but continues to receive unsolicited text messages, the NCC would probe the concerned service provider.

    According to him, when it has been established that the service provider errs, the commission will not only insist that the subscriber should be refunded for whatever that must have been charged by the operator, it will also impose a fine of N5million for each subscriber that has been violated.

    Unsolicited text messages have been endemic in the Nigerian mobile service industry, thereby prompting the NCC to come up with a regulation requiring mobile service providers to give subscribers the option of opting out of all unsolicited text messages.

     

  • 25 suspected pirates arrested by NCC

    The Lagos Zonal Office of the Nigerian Copyright Commission has arrested 25 suspected pirates and seized goods worth N76.6 million in 2016.According to Mr Obi Ezielo, the Zonal Manager of the commission ,  the  organisation also carried out the anti-piracy raids within the year under review.

    The locations where the 25 suspected pirates were arrested include; Alaba, Shomolu, Ajegunle and Ojo.He informed  that the action was also extended to some major markets in the state.

    The seized goods include 350,000 copies of optical discs, some home videos, movies, musical works and literary books, suspected of being pirated.Ezeilo said that NCC seized N20 million worth of goods  in Alaba market in March and N1.5million goods in April in the same market.

    ‘’In June, N5 million goods were seized at Shomolu, in July, N50 million worth of goods were also seized in Shomolu while in August, N50,000 worth of goods were seized in Ajegunle Lamlad,” he said.

    Ezeilo said that some of the suspects had been charged to the Federal High Court in Lagos.

    He also informed  that the commission conducted anti-piracy inspection in professional print, publishing and CDs’ distribution outlets within Lagos metropolis where it made some seizures.

    He said that the commission would step up its anti-piracy raids and eradication in 2017.

    “Despite the financial constraints confronting the commission, we will not fail to discharge our mandate, because the eradication of piracy attitude is our utmost priority.”

    He said that though 2016 was a challenging year for the commission, the commission made it marks.

    Ezeilo assured stakeholders of the commission’s zeal and effort to combat piracy in 2017 adding that genuine creators would benefit from the products of their creativity.