Tag: NCC

  • SIM cards registration chaos

    SIM cards registration chaos

    In a desperate last minute bid to beat the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) June 30th deadline for all existing GSM subscribers to register their subscriber identification module (SIM) or risk disconnection, not a few Nigerians went into a frenzy penultimate Sunday. It was a tale of anguish, sorrows and tears, reports Ibrahim Apekhade Yusuf

    CHAOS. That best described the situation penultimate Sunday as mobile telephone subscribers in the country on Sunday embarked on a last minute rush to register their subscriber identification module (SIM) cards in their desperation to beat the June 30 deadline.

    From the expressed anguish in their countenances, it was apparent that these set of Nigerians were wary of losing what they reckoned was their most prized possession, GSM lines, what with the way they defied the early morning drizzle.

    Expectedly, not many of these hopeful subscribers were able to register their lines at the end of the day, thus fuelling speculations that a possible extension could be allowed.

    It also instructive to note that many subscribers who had undertaken to register their lines long before the deadline also suffered similar fate as the laggards.

    Speaking to a cross section of respondents who had their lines blocked, they all spoke in anguish. “In a civilised country we could have taken a class action against these networks for rendering us practically incommunicado for no fault of ours. But then, this is only possible in a country like Nigeria,” lamented Adio Musbau, a mobile telecom subscriber whose two lines were blocked by the networks.

    Intense lobby

    Firing the first salvo, the Association of Licensed Telecommunications Operators of Nigeria had written to the NCC, asking for an extension of the deadline for the SIM card registration.

    The association said it was concerned about the notice of instruction for mass disconnection of unregistered subscribers with effect from June 30, 2013.

    The letter, which was addressed to the Executive Vice- Chairman of the commission, Dr. Eugene Juwah, read in part, “SIM card registration has been ongoing for a while but subscribers have embraced this exercise more in the past few weeks leading to the June 30, 2013 deadline.

    “Also, in the light of the security situation in the country and the general logistic problem, it has been very difficult for the subscribers, registration agents and our members (operators) to meet the June 30, 2013 deadline.”

    But in a swift reaction, the NCC through its Director of Public Affairs, Mr. Tony Ojobo, said there was not going to be no extension.

    It had been reported that about 19.16 million subscribers across the country might be disconnected from mobile telecommunication networks following the directive from the regulatory agency.

    This represents the number of subscribers that were not registered during the national Subscriber Identity Module card registration exercise that kicked off in the country on February 28, 2011.

    Sources had indicated that the SIM card registration exercise recorded about 80 per cent success.

    This means that about 20 per cent of the nation’s active subscriber base was not registered by the time the first phase of the exercise ended.

    As at the time the exercise ended, the subscriber base stood at 95,886,714. Twenty per cent of this base sums up to 19,117,342 subscribers.

    Although the active subscriber base has since surpassed 110,000,000, new subscribers could not be involved in the calculation as additional subscribers must have registered before their SIM cards were activated.

    Speaking exclusively with The Nation, he said it was unthinkable to suggest another extension given the fact that the NCC had given well over 27 months grace period for the exercise.

    “It is practically unthinkable to say we should give further extension. We expect by now that every subscriber must have duly registered their lines because there is no going back on the disconnection, this is inevitable.

    “Let me also state that the Nigerian Communications Commission is ready to sanction telecom operators that fail to disconnect unregistered subscribers. They will face sanctions from the regulatory agency. No operator would go unpunished if it failed to comply with the directive to switch off all unregistered subscribers.”

    He said, “No extension of time has been given and we have given directive to all operators to disconnect all unregistered SIM cards.

    “We are not going to sit down at the switches of the operators, but we know how to monitor them. If we establish any non-compliance, they will be sanctioned. For now, we don’t have the number of SIM cards that have been disconnected but we are monitoring the situation.”

    An official of the MTN, who asked not to be named because he was not authorised to speak to the press, told The Nation that the telecoms giant was not worried over the planned threat by the NCC to cut off subscribers yet to register their lines following the expiration of the deadline penultimate Sunday.

    According to him, the company did everything humanly possible to ensure that its subscribers meet the deadline set by the NCC. As such, any subscriber yet to duly register his or her lines should be ready to face the music.

    “I recalled that we dedicated many outlets where our subscribers could go and register their lines. In some cases, we had to call our subscriber directly, especially those who initially did their registration halfway in order to complete the process and for every request we made, we backed it up with free recharge card vouchers valued at N400. So, if for instance we called a customer thrice in order to authenticate his details such as inquiry on his/or her state of origin, mother’s maiden name, among others, we ensured that for every separate request made, the customer in question earned some free credit to compensate for his time and all of that.

    “So, having done this, we believe that our subscribers availed themselves of the opportunity allowed by the grace period. As for now we are no longer registering lines except those newly acquired.”

    The source recalled that most network operators had sent an email to subscribers, stating that “In line with the directive of the NCC that all SIM cards be registered, we implore all our existing subscribers to register their SIM at any of our dealer outlets nationwide to register their SIMs.”

    A fait accompli

    After what seems an agonising wait, subscribers who failed to meet the June 30th deadline set by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) have since being disconnected from the network just as the NCC had threatened to do.

    Sharing her experience, Ms. Patience Akpabio, an MTN subscriber, recalled that she received the above text message at about 7.30 pm on Thursday night and exactly two minutes away from midnight, his line was barred from making calls and text messages among others.

    Mrs. Akpabio, who claimed to have been registered before, was swearing at the top of her voice that she was going to port to another line in protest against what she considered a selective treatment.

    “I registered my line sometime in March when I had gone to retrieve it following misplacement. I was therefore taken aback on Friday morning when I was told that I couldn’t make calls anymore. In fact, I’m going to port to another network. There is no point enduring the maltreatment by the MTN,”she lamented.

    During a visit to the MTN at their Matori office, a staff of the company who answered queries from our correspondent, said it was unfortunate that some subscribers had to be disconnected. According to him, “Enough notice was given for anybody who suspected he may not have been duly registered to do so. For those who couldn’t, they have to forfeit their lines.”

    Citing different text messages sent to subscribers, the source said it was only inevitable that the network had to defer to the NCC by disconnecting some of its subscribers that were yet to be registered.

    Investigation by The Nation revealed that some of the network operators may have lost a chunk of their data during the flood which ravaged different parts of the country coupled with the insurgent attacks and excruciating cost of maintaining its infrastructure across the country.

    Giving an insight, Lynda Saint-Nwafor, who heads MTN’s Core Network Planning Strategy, the unit responsible for designing and planning all aspects of MTN’s network operations, said the telecoms sector was still smarting from the problem of flooding and insurgent attacks on its infrastructure.

    The industry, she stressed, “has not fully recovered. This is because it will take more than targeted interventions to make sure that floods don’t become an issue this year and also rebuild the entire infrastructure that we lost to the insurgency. Recovery is going to be a long process because as we speak there are more attacks on our infrastructure in the North and in some of those places where the attacks have subsided; access is restricted because security agencies are still giving us a red flag. So, it’s going to take a while for the industry to get back to where it was pre-flood and insurgency.”

    Speaking specifically on the effect on its business and the level of repairs so far, Saint-Nwafor said: “We had over 220 sites impacted by the incessant attacks in the North and to date we have been able to restore services to about 60 percent of those sites. We monitor the improvement in security in those areas before we deploy our staff and contractors for restoration activities. But I must say that there are some areas we were not allowed to come back to. The communities feel that the presence of telecoms infrastructure is a risk to them and so do not want anything to do with us, posing a big challenge to the restoration effort.”

    Expatiating, she said: “The ecosystem – in the delivery of telecommunication services, there are so many factors at play, starting with the government; the required approvals, the issue of permits, and multiple taxation; the fact that we can’t move when we want to move because there are certain dependencies that we have to deal with. Then continuous and consistent vandalism of our infrastructure – last year alone, we had upwards of 1000 fibre cuts on our network; and between November and December, we registered about 160 cuts in just one month. Finally, power which contributes circa 70 percent of all the failures on the network is a major challenge, which by implication means that when the issues in the power sector are resolved and our Base Stations are all connected to the national grid, 70 percent of the bad experiences Nigerians have on the network will be a thing of the past.”

  • Group canvasses more powers for NCC to check telcos

    Group canvasses more powers for NCC to check telcos

    The Nigeria Internet Group (NIG) has asked that the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) be given the power to sack the chief executive officers of erring telecoms companies.

    NIG President, Bayo Banjo, said the NCC was copying the regulatory pattern of developed countries where the chief executive officers of the firms were accountable to the shareholders.

    He said:“The NCC is not a serious regulator in the sense that it is trying to adopt sanctions that work abroad but those sanctions don’t work here. Let us assume you fine a big organisation like most of the telecoms companies N300 million. How many subscribers do they have? The one that has 50 million for example, to get that N300 million, it just needs N5 from each of its subscribers. How does that pain them?

    “The reason that type of sanction works abroad is that when it is time for the company’s Annual General Meeting (AGM), the shareholders will look at the books and the CEO and tell him: You caused us to lose N300 million that would have been in our kitty. We are going to remove you. So the CEO knows that he has to sit up and listen to what the regulator is saying but here, you fine the operators, they pay the fine and life goes on. If you want to get Nigerian companies to behave well, apply what hs been seen to work.”

    According to him, the regulator should have powers similar to that of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to institutionalise discipline in the industry.

    “The CBN governor has the right to remove the CEO of a bank if he deems him or her unfit to be a CEO. Give NCC that power when the NCC says: I have given you a letter to do this, you are ignoring it, I am going to remove you. That CEO will quickly implement the content of the letter but if it is a fine, they know how to manipulate the system such that they don’t feeel its impact. You fine them N600 million, they just go to the computer, do the calculation and say okay, that is N10 per subscriber. The subscribers will not even notice it. Human beings are the same everywhere in the world, reacting to sanctions but the sanctions here don’t work,” he said.

    He added that a measure of sanity came to the banking sector when the CEOs of the banks started losing their exalted positions, arguing that if Nigerian subscribers were ever going to get quality telecom services, the NCC must be given the power to sack telecoms CEOs.

  • No extension for SIM card registration, says NCC

    No extension for SIM card registration, says NCC

    •Orders disconnection of erring subscribers

    Regulator of the telecoms sector, the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), yesterday insisted that there will be no extension to the Sunday, June 30 deadline placed on the nationwide subscriber identification module (SIM) cards.

    The commission maintained that the action is in the interest of national security.

    It noted that a directive to effect massive disconnection of all unregistered line on the network had been conveyed to the operators yesterday.

    Director, Public Affairs of NCC, Tony Ojobo, told The Nation that any subscriber who could not register his or her SIM card for 27 months deserve to lose the line.

    Ojobo explained that there was a deeper interest in SIM card registration as unscrupulous elements were hiding under the anonymity they enjoyed with unregistered but active SIM cards to unleash terror on their fellow human beings.

    “There shall be no extension to SIM card registration in the country. The exercise was supposed to end in April but the operators pleaded for more time. It was granted. Now they are asking for more time. The NCC would not acquiesce to such demand. SIM card registration has gone on for 27 months. If within these months, any subscriber could not go and do his or her SIM registration, such a subscriber deserves to lose such line,” Ojobo said.

    He noted that the operators tried through text messages, codes and other forms to sensitise their subscribers on the need to register their SIM cards, lamenting that some subscribers ignored the messages.

    He said any operator who failed to provide short codes to its subscribers to enable them (subscribers) know their SIM card registration update must lose those subscribers.

    “What people don’t seem to understand is that there is a security dimension to SIM card registration. Therefore, it cannot continue to go indefinitely. It has to end. The more you extend it, the more you create opportunity for unscrupulous elements to commit terror against the nation. The national security dimension is usually not played up because security matters are usually not discussed on the pages of national dailies. So, SIM card registration must end and those unregistered SIMs deactivated from the networks,” Ojob said.

    The operators, acting under the aegis of Association of Licensed Telecoms Companies of Nigeria (ALTON) had in a letter dated June 28 addressed to the Executive Vice Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the NCC, Dr Eugene Juwah, pleaded with the regulator to extend the exercise that commenced on March 28, 2011.

    Signed by its Chairman, Gbenga Adebayo, the operators craved the regulator’s indulgence to extend the exercise by another three months, citing recent security challenges in some parts of the country that has had taken a toll on people’s movement and livelihood.

    National Association of Telecoms Subscribers (NATCOMS), also asked for an extension. President of the group, Deolu Ogunbanjo, said that if the NCC acquiesced to the group’s demand, more subscribers will not lose their SIM cards to disconnection for no errors of theirs.

    Ojobo however, said there is still a window of opportunity for any subscriber that fall victim of the disconnection. According to him, what they (subscribers) will lose is the old line while they could still buy new SIM cards, register them and continue to enjoy the dividend of the revolution.

  • Mobile phone subscriptions grow by 6.2m

    Mobile phone subscriptions grow by 6.2m

    The telecoms industry has continued to experience growth as about 6.2 million new subscribers joined the network in the first quarter of this year.

    This translates to an increase of 7.2 per cent, latest industry data from Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has shown.

    This latest addition pushes the current total active mobile subscriptions in the country up from 113.1 million at the end of December, 2012 to 119.3 million at the end of April.

    Active telephone subscriptions increased from 113.1 million to 114.4 million, 116.6 million, 117.2 million and 119.3 million in January, February, March and April respectively.

    The data showed that total connected telephone lines in the country now stands at 164.8 million at the end of April, 2013, having increased from 161.9 million, 159.8 million and 154.5 million in January, February and March in the first quarter.

    The data further revealed an increase in teledensity (defined as the percentage of connected lines in relation to the population at a given period of time and its growth is proportional to the growth in subscriber base) from 80.85 per cent in December 2012 to 81.78 per cent, January; 83.29 per cent in February; 83.77 per cent in March and 85.25 per cent at the end of April, in the quarter under review.

    While the data also showed that installed capacity reached 237.4 million as at April 2013, it was 237.3 million; 226.6 million and 226.6 million in January, February and March respectively.

    Installed capacity, according to the regulator, is the total number of telephone lines, which telecoms networks have built their network capacity to accommodate at a particular point in time.

    NCC noted that telecoms firms continue to invest heavily on network expansion to be able to accommodate more subscribers on their networks.

    With this capacity, it is believed that the network can accommodate 72.6 million additional subscribers, since total connected lines is still around 164.8 million, of which 119.3 million are active, thus suggesting that the operators have not optimised the capacity of the network.

    As it has always been, the data reflected that the increase in subscribers numbers came from  Global System for Mobile (GSM) communications comprising MTN, Globacom, Airtel and Etisalat.

    While GSM networks increased combined subscriptions from 111.1 million in January to 116.3 million at the end of April, the sick Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) operators decreased from 2.8 million in January to 2.6 million in April while the moribund fixed wired/ wireless operators also declined from 410,664 lines to 396,939 lines.

  • Convergence threatens telecoms regulatory frameworks, says NCC

    The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) said the emergence of convergence in the information communications technology (ICT) industry has given rise to regulatory challenges as firms and facilities merge.

    Executive Vice Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the NCC, Dr Eugene Juwah, disclosed this in Lagos while speaking on the Future of telecommunications services and disruptive Influence of convergence as guest lecturer at a forum organised by the Nigerian Acadecmy of Engineering.

    The forum was christened Academy Technology Dinner held at the Lagos Sheraton Hotel and Towers, Ikeja.

    Quoting Hellerstein & Associates, he said: “Convergence is the ability of one or different network s to carry different services. Convergence can also be defined as the bringing together of industries in the communications area, which were previously viewed as separate and distinct in both the commercial and the technological sense.”

    According to Juwah, the provision of internet access and television to mobiles and triple or quad play services offered by internet service providers (ISPs) is an example of convergence, adding that the biggest internet providers in the country are the four global system for mobile (GSM) communication service providers who have deployed infrastructure which are services ‘agnostic.’

    He said: “These infrastructure are internet protocol (IP) based. Hence voice, data and video services are being carried on the same network infrastructures. What were once distinct networks carrying distinct services, each with its own protocol, are now uniformly carried over IP networks.”He lamented that the development has thrown up challenges “because traditional regulatory frameworks were designed for an era when clear functional diffrences existed between services and infrastructure and were not designed for new environment of converged networks and services where functional diffrences no longer exist.”

    He cited areas, such as interconnection between networks, vexed issue of quality of service (QoS) as well as competition and pricing as some of the new challenges thrown up by convergence.

    According to him, with convergence leading to the evolution of networks from circuit switched based to IP packet switched based system, QoS framework for both systems is also different, adding that for the former, ensuring quality serviec has been a function of the regulator.

    “However, for converged services, new QoS standards are required since each of the services have different QoS requirements. Telecommunications services have a more stringent standards compared to traditional data sevices like email services. This will thus require a modification of existing QoS frameworks to both enable the growth of these new converged services and still maintain an optimal level of QoS delivery,” he said.

  • Number portability: NCC’s silver bullet

    SIR: History was made in the telecommunication industry on Monday, April 22, when the new number portability policy was launched in Lagos by the Nigerian Communication Commission. With the introduction of this laudable policy, the Eugene Juwah-led NCC has not only succeeded in restoring back the power of choice to Nigerian subscribers, but has gone a long way in setting the transformational ball rolling in the industry which will ignite a positive revolution in the telecommunication sector.

    Before the conceptualization of this policy by NCC, Nigerian subscribers have been subjected to economic slavery by the service providers whose sole aim is to keep on maximizing profits by exploiting Nigerians at the expense of good service delivery. The service providers have not only beaten Nigerians like the proverbial child through fraudulent and unwarranted excessive charges, but made sure that the child did not complain or even cry!

    Imagine a situation whereby the service providers makes a mind-boggling and whopping sum of N1.5 billion on daily basis from poor Nigerians subscribers struggling to survive on less than two dollars a day without providing quality service that were being paid for; is nothing to write home about!

    I am not blinded to the challenges being faced by network service providers in Nigeria on daily basis; like power crisis, insecurity, environmental issues, etc, which are not witnessed in other countries, but Nigerian subscribers should not be over-burdened by making them to be paying exorbitant tariffs in other to cover up for the inefficiencies and deficiencies of Nigerian system which they are also victims of; rather they should be made to enjoy quality telecommunication services as obtained in other climes of the globe, especially when compared tariffs charged in Nigeria with what is being offered by the same service providers in other countries.

    Since the firing of this proverbial silver bullet by the NCC, network service providers have been running helter-skelter in order to retain their subscribers.

    Network service providers are now strategising on how to expand their network coverage; improve on the quality of their services; reduce their tariffs, re-brand their networks in other to attract new subscribers that are ready to port.

    The NCC has, by the portability initiative, proved beyond reasonable doubt that it does not take a rocket science or miracle to create a positive change, but with the power of a tested and trusted idea; because ideas they say rules the world!

    • Comrade Nwobodo Chidiebere

    Abuja.

  • We have 50% of ported numbers, says Etisalat

    We have 50% of ported numbers, says Etisalat

    •NCC: No data released yet

    Fifty per cent of the total number of subscribers that have ported in the ongoing Mobile Number Portability (MNP) scheme has ported unto Etisalat Nigeria, the telco company said yesterday.

    But in a swift reaction, both the regulator, the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) and Interconnect Clearing House Nigeria Limited, said they have not made any data available to the public in this regard.

    A statement issued by the telco stated that seven weeks into mobile MNP scheme in the country, “Etisalat (is) already taking a huge lead with almost 50 per cent of ported numbers coming its way. This revelation was made after collating the successfully ported numbers at the end of the sixth week of the launch of the scheme and shows that Etisalat had almost 50 per cent of ported numbers so far.”

    Chief Commercial Officer at Etisalat Nigeria, Wael Ammar, disclosed this without giving details of the actual figures of ported numbers. He said: “I can tell you that Etisalat Nigeria has gained almost 50 per cent of the total figure of ported numbers so far. This is a clear indication that the Nigerian consumers have made their choice based on current realities on ground.

    We set out early in our business to ensure that we developed products and services that suit the lifestyle of all our target customers. We have also ensured that we have a reliable network to accommodate existing and new customers and these efforts have been recognised by the NCC and other stakeholders in the telecoms industry”.

    Ammar cited the last quality of service indicators for mobile operators released by the NCC shortly before the launch of MNP as a clear indication that Etisalat was ready for business. The report shows that Etisalat met all the KPI targets as signed in the memorandum of understanding (MoU) for Drop Call Rate (DCR), Call Setup Success Rate (CSSR), Traffic Channel Congestion (TCHcong) and Stand Alone Dedicated Control Channel (SDCCHcong). This he said, has even been acknowledged by the regulator, which has given it different awards.

    However, Director, Public Affairs, NCC, Tony Ojobo, said the agency has not released any figure because of ongoing subscriber identification module (SIM) cards. He said any operator that is making any claim was free to do so, adding that it was all in the spirit of competition.

  • NCC arrests two for ‘piracy’

    Two traders in Onitsha, Anambra State, have been arrested by the Nigeria Copyrights Commission (NCC). Goods worth over N2 million were impounded.

    The commission invaded an electronics market on the Asaba-Onitsha Expressway yesterday, led by its Principal Officer, Field Work, Gabriel Anikwem.

    They were in search of traders, who specialised in selling pirated music discs in Onitsha and its environs.

    The suspects were arrested when NCC officials raided Sky Music and God is able music lines.

    Speaking with reporters after the raid, the NCC’s Zonal Manager, Emeka Ogbonna, said they were alerted by some concerned traders, following the spate of piracy in the markets.

    He said the organisation was committed to tackling the piracy in the country, especially in Onitsha and its environs.

    Ogbonna said the exercise was to make people not reap where they did not sow.

  • NCC, Phase 3 partner over underserved areas

    NCC, Phase 3 partner over underserved areas

    The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has struck a partnership deal with Phase3 Telecom under the Universal Service Provisioning Fund (USPF) B-Train project to extend fibre infrastructure to unserved and underserved areas of the country.

    Business Solution Manager of the firm, Mr.Otuya Okecha, disclosed this to The Nation in Lagos, adding that the project will bring telecoms services to the rural areas of the country.

    According to him, this will help speed up the realisation of Federal Government’s initiatives targeted at addressing the sleuth of OTC infrastructure to the rural areas.Otuya further said that this will make an impact in the country’s broadband development from the point of infrastructure setting the platform for broadband penetration and coverage in especially the underserved areas.

    He also said that the government should make the sector attractive by giving enough funding and grant for broadband investor to get to the underserved areas.

  • NCC, telcos tangle over sim registration

    NCC, telcos tangle over sim registration

     The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has fixed June 30 as the deadline for the conclusion of Subscriber Identification Module (SIM) card registration. But the service providers are asking for more time to do a thorough job of the exercise which began in 2011. How long does it take to register a sim card? Luicas Ajanaku reports.

    Though Vivian Ekeada, a secondary school teacher, lives and works in Lagos, she got her Subscriber Identification Module (SIM) registered in Nekede, Imo State. According to her, she was on vacation and one of her hosts told her there was a registration centre nearby. She took advantage of that to register her sim card.

    While in Lagos, Vivian had seen agents lined up in Oshodi, Ikeja and other parts of the metropolis, extorting N50 from subscribers for each SIM card registered. Because she had read in the papers that the exercise is free, she refused to do the registration until the opportunity of her vacation came.

    Kunle Lanrewaju, a civil servant, got his SIM registered in his office. He also took advantage of a mobile SIM registration agent to do it a long time ago. He was shocked when he received a message from his service provider informing him that his SIM registration failed. He promptly walked into one of the customer care centres of his operator and got the SIM registered again.

    These are a few of the challenges that subscribers have to cope with during the nationwide SIM card registration exercise which was launched in March 2011 by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC).

    When the telecoms sector was liberalised more than a decade ago, Nigerians long traumatised by the inefficiency that characterised the services of former state-run telco, NITEL, rushed to get a mobile telephone number. It opened a new window of opportunity to Nigerians in all facets of life. Amidst the euphoria that greeted this revolution, the wisdom in getting subscribers to register their lines before use was lost.

    That wisdom came back when the mobile phone now transformed from merely being an instrument of communication but to a sophisticate weapon in the armoury of criminal elements who buy the SIM, use it for one criminal activity or the other and dump. When kidnap-for-ransom became a time-honoured predilection in some parts of the country, mobile phones became the ready instrument to negotiate the ransom to be paid to the kidnappers.

    Armed robbers linked one another from one state to the other, planned their operations and unleashed pains and anguish on innocent citizens with mobile phones. It is against this backdrop that the office of the National Security Adviser (NSA) and other security agencies closed ranks and agreed that there was, indeed, the need to register SIM cards in the country. Thus, it was not strange then that the NCC got a budgetary allocation of N6.1 billion for the exercise.

    Preparation for the exercise got underway under Mr. Ernest Ndukwe, former executive vice chairman of the NCC.

    The first salvo was fired with a statement from the NCC which read: “The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), in exercise of its regulatory functions as provided for by the Nigerian Communications Act (NCA) 2003, wishes to inform the general public and all the relevant stakeholders that arrangements have been concluded for the commencement of registration of all SIM card holders in Nigeria,” adding that with effect from March 1, 2010, all new SIM cards in Nigeria must be registered before activation.

    The commission set the provision of e-passports, corporate/company or work place identity cards that has pension identification /tax numbers, student ID cards from recognised institutions, drivers’ licence issued by the Federal Road Safety Commission ( FRSC) and e-tax cards as pre-requisites for registration.

    It said further that the process will include the capture of the photograph and biometrics of the subscriber, adding that “proxy registration shall be restricted to the direct families of persons seeking registration.”

    Ndukwe said registering SIM cards was necessary to prevent the harassment many Nigerians have undergone in recent years, due to individuals who use mobile phones to perpetrate crimes. He stressed the need for public awareness.

    “NCC should also work hand in hand with the National Identity Card Management Commission (NIMC) in order to ensure the success of this programme since it is widely known that there is absence of an authentic identity data in Nigeria. The success of the SIM registration process will one way or the other assist in the proposed implementation of Mobile Number Portability which is under way,” he added.

    In line with the suggestion of the Ndukwe, sources close to NIMC said officials of the NCC consulted it widely and a number of recommendations were made which were later jettisoned. One of such recommendations was the capture of all the finger prints of the SIM card holder. NCC settled for three while the recommendations on photo capture were also largely ignored as any object now serves as background if the picture was ever captured. But, in spite of the imperfection, the exercise continued until the NCC placed June 30 as the timeline to end it. All old SIMs not registered would be disconnected from the network.

    Association of Licensed Telecoms Operators of Nigeria (ALTON) chairman Gbenga Adebayo disagrees with the NCC. According to him, there has been a significant disruption to the lives of people in certain parts of the country. Some of the affected persons are subscribers who may have been displaced as a result of the problems. To this end, he is not comfortable with the timeline.

    “Given the reality of what we face, you know we have had significant disruption in the activities in some parts of the country and which has also affected the movement of persons and businesses. So, certain circumstances the last three or four months haven’t helped the situation as it were. Therefore, as at today, we are not 100 per cent ready for the exercise to end. What the NCC should do is to provide a direction of the data base it has registered. Recall that we did some parts and NCC also did some parts, so if NCC is putting the deadline of June 30, it should give a declaration of the readiness or integrity of the data it has recorded over the period before putting a blanket disconnection order on service providers.

    “So, for me, before we say unregistered subscribers should be disconnected, we should embark on data clean up where there will be integration of data registered by the operators and those registered by the regulator. After the outcome of that, we can take a decision either to disconnect or not. But, as it is today, it will appear that the NCC is sitting on its own data; no one knows the integrity of the data it has collated. We haven’t harmonised the data collated so far. I think there is need to revisit the June 30 deadline again,” Adebayo said.

    But the National Association of Telecoms Subscribers (NATCOMS) differs. It argues that the NCC has given more than enough time for the exercise. Deolu Ogunbanjo, its president, said the regulator has given a total of 21 months for the exercise.

    According to him, when the NCC said the exercise will run for six months, ALTON requested for nine months while NATCOMS asked for 12 months. While the former’s request lapsed last year September, the latter’s expired May.

    “So, after all these, we have got more than we asked for. So, the June 30 deadline is in order. Let the regulator disconnect any line not registered after the timeline,” he said.

    Corporate Services Executive, MTN, Akinwale Goodluck, said the telco was working towards meeting the deadline. He said the telco had invested massively on personnel and tools to ensure a hitch-free exercise. He added that leveraging on MTN’s experience in other countries where it operates, it has ensured the success of the exercise in the country by investing in tools.

    On the integrity of the data gathered, he said it may not be 100 per cent foolproof but, for the first time, the country was getting data that could aid security and national planning.

    Aside the agents that cut corners during the exercise, the operators who did were fined N53.8 million. All the four mobile telecommunication operators contravened the rules on registration of SIM. They were accused of pre-registering SIMs for sale contrary to the rules set by the regulator.