The Guardian (Nigeria)

X- raying Maida’s agenda for Nigeria’s $ 76b telecoms sector

ADEYEMI

- ADEPETUN

The Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission ( NCC), Dr Aminu Maida, in Lagos last week, met with journalist­s to explain his vision for the telecoms sector in the next five years and called on stakeholde­rs for support. But it is too early in the day to tell how far the chief executive will go in achieving his goals, writes.

ACCOMPANIE­D to Lagos by the NCC team, including the executive commission­ers in charge of stakeholde­r management and technical services ( Adeleke Adewolu and Ubale Maska, the Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission NCC), Dr Aminu Maida, at a media parly in Lagos, listed four critical areas of concentrat­ion to reposition Nigeria’s $ 76 billion telecoms sector.

According to Maida, the four- point agenda includes improved regulatory services, a stronger sense of cooperatio­n among operators/ with the regulator, leveraging technology to improve the quality of service and building more accountabl­e operators. The areas are summed up in collaborat­ion, data- centric, compliance and digitalisa­tion of the sector. To achieve the four goals, the NCC under Maida will work with three major stakeholde­rs – consumers, operators ( investors) and the government.

To be guided by the provisions of the Nigerian Communicat­ions Act ( NCA 2003), Maida said though the commission will allow for supervisio­n, he will never give room for regulatory capture of NCC, rather, would work in line with the provisions of the 2003 Act, which laid down guidelines on how to evolve a desirable regulatory environmen­t.

He, however, assured that he would continue some of the programmes of the previous administra­tion of NCC, which truly laid the background for effective regulatory achievemen­ts.

Maida assured that the NCC will be “reviewing the operating standards and introducin­g new ones, which are in line with internatio­nal best practices. We are going to be leveraging technology to review our regulatory services and internal processes so that our turnaround time for our regulatory services is greatly improved.” From QOS to QOE

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HE NCC EVC is keen on focusing on the needs of each stakeholde­r in the telecoms value chain. “For instance, we know consumers are looking for total quality of experience ( QOE). We will be driving QOE, right from the point of how they find and select telecoms services. “We will be leveraging data to empower consumers to make the right choice so that we can move away from the world where we have multiple SIM devices. “Rather than multiple devices and SIM cards, we are looking at a situation, where consumers will only have one SIM card and one device.

“We are also going to be working with our licensees on data tariff, speed and coverage. We are going to be working

with our licensees to see how tariffs can be simpler and more transparen­t,” he stated.

According to him, NCC will enlighten consumers to understand the habits that drive greater data usage, “because as we upgrade our phones, we are buying phones with stronger data tolerance, which are producing better quality pictures and posting them on our social media platforms, but fail to realize that these habits consume data faster.

“We are also going to be focusing on issues that have escalated. We are going to be stepping in, as a regulator, to see what the common issues that consumers are complainin­g about, what are the regulators doing about them, so that we can hold everybody in the value chain accountabl­e. Mobile fraud prevention

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TILL on consumer protection, Maida, who just clocked 100 days in office, informed that the Commission would soon develop a regulation that will make it a criminal offence for anyone to use their mobile lines for fraud.

According to him, as of now, there is no consequenc­e for using mobile lines for fraud, which is why many people have continued to perpetrate the nefarious act unchecked.

Maida said the regulation that will come up later this year would ensure that fraudsters using mobile lines for fraud face consequenc­es.

The EVC also expressed concerns over people using other people’s lines to commit fraud because of recycling. To address this, he said Nigerian banks would also need to continuous­ly revalidate the ownership of numbers attached to bank accounts as telecoms operators are bound to recycle and resell mobile lines not used for a certain period.

Highlighti­ng the Commission’s strategic focus for the year, Maida said: “We want to protect the integrity of our mobile numbers. When we don’t use it for a while, it has to be recycled and this exposes people to fraud. We want to create more awareness about this so that people can understand that there is a window during which if they do not use their line, it can be allocated to another person.

“People are using mobile numbers for a lot of frauds today and this is because there is no consequenc­e. We are coming up with a regulation that will make sure there is a consequenc­e for using your mobile for fraud.”

Operators to be accountabl­e

MAIDA added that the Commission would strongly exercise its regulatory authority and ensure that licensees comply with their obligation­s and meet agreements. He said licensees must be ready to comply with the standards of the commission as well as ensure they keep to their part of any agreements made in any deal.

“Compliance is also another driver. As a regulator, as empowered by the NCA Acts and regulation­s we put in place. We have the power to hold our licensees to their obligation­s.

“So over the past couple of years, I think the industry has been in what I would say developmen­t phase, but it’s time we push ourselves into a maturity phase whereby we will be driving compliance. “Compliance would be something you’re going to be seeing that we drive very strongly.

“Whenever our licensees have an obligation to meet, we will be expecting them to meet those obligation­s. If they have agreements between themselves, we’ll be expecting them to meet those agreements,” he said.

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ARTS of the digitisati­on the sector expected to see will be to see that all Subscriber­s Identifica­tion Modules ( SIM) cards are registered and linked to their National Identifica­tion Number ( NIN).

Maida, who emphasised the importance of SIM registrati­on, said directives are already out for all SIMS to be linked, stressing that operators will bar any unlinked telephone lines by February 29.

Speaking more on the enforcemen­t, the Director of Compliance Monitoring and Enforcemen­t, NCC, Efosa Idehen, said the Commission is doing everything possible to ensure that SIM- related crimes are reduced.

While statistics showed that as of August 2023, over 300 million SIMS have been connected in Nigeria, of which 220 million are active since the telecoms revolution started over two decades now, Idehen emphasised that buying pre- registered SIM remains a criminal offence, stressing that the Commission will arrest and prosecute any individual or group involved in the sales and use of pre- registered SIM cards in Nigeria.

“For every device registered with a SIM card, we know the person behind it. Therefore, every SIM card not linked to NIN will be removed,” he stated.

Maida informed that harmonisat­ion of the disparate data in the country is currently ongoing, stressing that it is a major task before the Ministry of Communicat­ions, Innovation and Digital Economy.

All SIMS must be registered, linked

Whenever our licensees have an obligation to meet, we will be expecting them to meet those obligation­s. If they have agreements between themselves, we’ll be expecting them to meet those agreements.

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