Business
‘SIM Card Registration, Major Exercise In Telecoms’
The registration of the Subscriber Identification Module (SIM) cards by the NCC was one of major developments in the telecoms industry in 2011.
The NCC registration exercise started immediately after the conclusion of individual service providers’ registration of the SIM cards. The SIM registration by the service providers started in 2010 and ended in 2011.
The NCC registration was officially flagged off by the Executive Vice Chairman (EVC) of the NCC, Dr. Eugene Juwah, on March 28, 2011.
Juwah said that the involvement of NCC in the project was to ensure that the registration project achieved the primary goal of checking crime rates in the country.
He said that the NCC registration was significant as the nation had been waiting for the day when all the SIM cards being used in the country would be registered.
The NCC EVC also said that the project would enable the country to have a central data base for all mobile phone users in Nigeria.
He said that NCC would bequeath to the nation a pool of data that would assist other agencies of government, especially the security agencies and the National Identity Management Commission.
“Although challenges are not unexpected in an exercise of this nature, we will make every effort to minimise and overcome such challenges as they occur.
“We currently have over 89 million active lines in the national telecoms network and after six months from today, all these lines are expected to be registered.
“The registration exercise will last for a period of six months,’’ Juwah said.
He called on users of mobile phones in Nigeria to register their SIM cards with NCC appointed SIM card registration agents nationwide.
“No Nigerian or visitor to Nigeria, using mobile phones, is exempted from this exercise.
“At the end of the six months of this registration, all unregistered SIM cards will be disconnected from the various networks,’’ the NCC’s chief said.
The NCC directed that proxies could register the SIM cards of their minors or elderly persons.
Executive Commissioner, Stakeholder Management in the NCC, Mr Okechukwu Itanyi, said that the gesture was allowed where such dependents could not come out physically to register.
“A dependable relation can register on behalf of a subscriber, which means that the photograph and biometrics of such relation would be taken in place of the phone owner,’’ Itanyi said.
He said that the decision of the commission to allow for proxy registration was to ensure that no SIM card user was left out of the exercise.
At the end of the six months provided for the registration exercise on September 28, the NCC announced an extension of the exercise.
Muoka said that the extension was to provide time for the harmonisation of the data collected during the six months period.
“While the Commission commends all telephone subscribers who were able to register their lines within the six months schedule for the registration, a new window of opportunity is now open for those who have not yet registered their SIM cards to do so within the limited period of the harmonisation exercise.
“This limited period, provides the last chance for all users of existing SIM cards to register as all unregistered SIM cards will be promptly disconnected without further notice at the conclusion of the harmonisation exercise,’’ he said.
Mouka said that the Commission was fully aware of the clamour by interested stakeholders for extension of the period.
The Chairman of the Association of Licensed Telecoms Operators of Nigeria (ALTON),
Mr Gbenga Adebayo, said that service providers asked for extension and NCC granted it.
Adebayo said that NCC was in a better position to tell how long the harmonisation period would take because they were the custodian of the data.
“We hope that in no time, we can harmonise these data and conclude the exercise,’’ he said.
Director of Customer Care at Globacom, Maria Svensson, said that although the operators wanted an extension of the registration period, that there was need for a specific date to be given.
Svensson said that subscribers’ enthusiasm to the exercise had waned as they had the feeling that there was no definite deadline.
The President of the National Association of Telecoms Subscribers (NATCOMS),
Chief Deolu Ogunbanjo, said it was wrong for NCC to allow indefinite registration of SIM cards among subscribers and the registering telecoms operators.
According to him, the suspected indefinite extension will not help NCC achieve its mandate on SIM registration.
The NATCOMS President called on NCC to fix a time frame for the harmonisation of data to enable Nigerians have a clear understanding as to when the registration would end.