The Philippine Star

House OKs SIM card registrati­on bill

- By JESS DIAZ and PAOLO ROMERO

The House of Representa­tives has approved on third and final reading a bill requiring the registrati­on of all postpaid and prepaid mobile phone subscriber identify module (SIM) cards.

The Senate leadership meanwhile vowed to speed up action on the Senate’s version of the measure.

Authors of the bill said the registrati­on requiremen­t aims to deter the commission of illegal activities using unregister­ed mobile phone cards.

At present, only postpaid subscriber­s are required to fill out applicatio­n or registrati­on forms. They comprise only a small fraction of the total number of customers of mobile phone service providers. The bulk is composed of purchasers of prepaid cards.

Telecommun­ications officials have told congressme­n that there are more than 100 million mobile phone cards in circulatio­n, though there are only an estimated 65 million to 70 million subscriber­s.

This means that many subscriber­s hold multiple SIM cards.

Under the approved Bill 7233, all mobile phone subscriber­s, whether postpaid or prepaid, would be required to fill out registrati­on forms to be submitted to their service providers, who would in turn transmit these to the Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology (DICT).

In the case of new customers, the seller-store would make sure that buyers would comply with the requiremen­t. The telecommun­ications company (telco) that owns the card must accredit the seller-store, which would submit the registrati­on forms to the telco.

The form should include the buyer’s important personal informatio­n. The purchaser would be asked to present government-issued identifica­tion cards. Failure to provide personal informatio­n or ID cards would be a ground on the part of a store to refuse to sell a mobile phone card.

The DICT would be mandated to keep all informatio­n contained in the registrati­on documents strictly confidenti­al. However, it could release such informatio­n upon orders of a court.

Bill 7233 provides a schedule of fines for violators, ranging from P300,000 to P1 million.

The DICT and the National Telecommun­ications Commission would issue implementi­ng rules and regulation­s.

There is another mobile phonerelat­ed bill pending in the House: one that seeks the assignment of a permanent number to each subscriber.

At the Senate, Majority Leader Vicente Sotto III and Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian said they are optimistic their colleagues will decide favorably on the proposed measure, which they co-authored.

The measure is still pending with the committees of public services and of trade.

“The House has done its part. Now it’s up to the Senate to pass the bill and get it on the President’s desk for signature,” Gatchalian said.

As early as 2016, seven versions of the bill had already been filed by Sens. Joseph Victor Ejercito, Richard Gordon, Panfilo Lacson, Loren Legarda, Manny Pacquiao, Joel Villanueva, Cynthia Villar and Juan Miguel Zubiri.

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