THISDAY

Senate Urged to Promote Bill to o Harmonise ICT Acts

- Stories by Emma Okonji

Participan­ts at a cyber security awareness forum organised by CECAD in Lagos recently, has called d on federal law makers, the Senate in particular, to come up with a Bill on ICTthat will harmonise all ICTActs that are currently in silos.

Participan­ts at a cyber security awareness forum organised by the Centre for Cyber Awareness and Developmen­t (CECAD) in Lagos recently, has called on federal law makers, the Senate in particular, to come up with a Bill on Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology (ICT) that will harmonise all ICT Acts that are currently in silos.

This, according to the forum, would help protect the country’s national critical data that would help Nigeria fortify its cyberspace that has been threatened by global cyberwar.

Keynote speaker at the forum, who is the Director General of Delta State Innovation Hub (DS-iHUB), Mr. Chris Uwaje, specifical­ly called on the Senate Committee on Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology to urgently promote the enactment National ICT Framework Bill to harmonise all ICT Acts into one foundation under the institutio­nal framework of ‘The Office of the ICT General of the Federation.’

Uwaje said the move became necessary in order to address the digital security challenges in the country’s cyberspace and the nation’s slow adoption of technology by corporate entities with special focus on the need and imperative­s for innovation, leadership, policy-makers and stakeholde­rs.

In discussing the theme for this year’s 4th edition forum of the Nigeria Mobile Economy Summit and Expo (NiMESE) 2017; ‘The Mobile Economy Impact in Nigeria: Policy, Innovation and Investment,’ Uwaje looked at Weaponisat­ion of Cyberspace Imperative­s of Cyber Defense in Protecting Corporate Assets, where he dwelt so much on cybersecur­ity threats and why Nigeria has failed to put things in the right perspectiv­e, given the current global revolution on knowledge economy,

According to Uwaje, “The World has systematic­ally entered its fourth industrial revolution, which is about knowledge economy and the global knowledge olympiad has begun.”

The success in the digital domain and platform-centric battlefiel­d, is speed- enabled intellectu­al property wealth creation in cyberspace.

“Therefore it is imperative for the new national assets, which is data, to be protected especially with the emergence of Internet of Things (IoT), which requires strategic interventi­on at all critical levels of developmen­t.”

He said protecting national critical infrastruc­ture will also create employment for Nigerian

youth, improve the country’s global e-Readiness status, improve national security concerns and accelerate global competitiv­eness.

In his interventi­on, the President of CECAD, Dr. Bayero Agambi, who spoke on why Nigeria is still lagging behind developed nations in technology innovation, expressed his displeasur­e why Nigeria can’t get it right technologi­cally.

Riding on the topic. ‘Can’t Get Why We Can’t Get it’, Agambi examined Nigeria’s performanc­e on the mobile economy and proffered solutions to some of the challenges inhibiting the emergence of a new Nigeria.

Citing census data, which revealed that almost 40 per cent of Nigerian Americans hold bachelors degrees, 17 per cent hold masters degrees, and 4 per cent hold doctoral, more than any other ethnic group in the America, Agambi said the data further supports the widely held notion that Nigerian culture emphasises education and places value on pursuing education as a means to financial success and personal fulfillmen­t, yet the country is yet to get it right technologi­cally.

Posing a question why the country has not got it right, Agambi said: “I just can’t get why we can’t get it. I really for a fact can’t get why we can’t get it. Can’t get it that we are at the middle of a knowledge

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