THISDAY

NCC: Why Some SIM Cards Previously Linked to NIN Were Barred

Lawyer files N10bn suit against NCC, MTN, others

- Chuks Okocha Igbintade Wale

The Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission (NCC) yesterday explained why some telecommun­ications subscriber­s who previously linked their Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) cards to their National Identifica­tion Numbers (NINs) still had their mobile lines barred.

NCC spokesman, Reuben Muoka, said “people who probably didn't get a cleared or verified NIN” have been barred because “the earlier ones they submitted was not good”.

Muoka, who was on a television programme monitored by THISDAY said some SIM cards had verificati­on and identifica­tion issues, including disparity in informatio­n, names and other data.

“There are still some subscriber­s whose NINs are yet to be verified by the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) and those have to also be corrected,” he said.

Many subscriber­s had complained that they had previously linked their NIN with their SIM cards years ago, but the NCC official said some lines were barred because the informatio­n on the NIN did not tally with what the customers registered with their SIM cards.

He said subscriber­s will have to visit the outlets of their service providers to validate their NINs and resolve other matters.

“For now, it requires those physical visits to the stations to get it verified and validated but in the future, we hope that this will be done virtually,” the NCC spokesman said.

The NCC had last week issued a directive to telecoms service providers to bar subscriber­s who have failed to link their phone numbers to their NIN on or before February 28, 2024.

As of December 2023, Nigeria had over 224 million, according to data from the NCC, with MTN boasting over 87 million subscriber­s, representi­ng 38.79 per cent of the total market share, the highest in the country by any licensed Mobile Network Operator (MNO).

Globacom and Airtel had 61 million subscriber­s each, while 9mobile had 13.9 million users.

Millions of lines were barred last week at the expiration of the deadline, but the regulator's spokesman said the NCC had been going through one deadline after the other since 2022 “to give extension for convenienc­e but it is time to get to a closure”.

He added: “Take it that everybody who has not submitted his NIN to the service providers has been barred. Actually, the service providers started barring people many days to the deadline,” he explained.

Muoka, however, said it will be difficult to tell the actual number of phone lines that had been barred, but that the NCC will do an audit before the end of the week as data is expected from service providers.

He said the NIN-SIM linkage has an objective to make Nigerians have digital identity to tackle security matters.

"The whole essence is actually to achieve the convenienc­e that digital services and products will offer. By the time you have your identity together, you will be able to attend to a number of things.

“Even the banks are now asking their customers to link their NINs to their Bank Verificati­on Numbers (BVNs). It is actually to make a holistic package of all your digital services,” he stated.

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