Nigeria Communications Week

NDPR will Change Nigeria’s Digital Economic Aspiration­s- NITDA DG

- Ugo Onwuaso

NATIONAL Informatio­n

Technology Developmen­t Agency (NITDA) has said that the recently released Nigerian Data Protection Regulation­s (NDPR) will change the digital economic aspiration­s of Nigeria.

Mallam Kashifu Inuwa Abdullahi, director general, NITDA, disclosed this during a virtual workshop for data protection officers and focal persons, held on Thursday.

The workshop organized by NITDA was held inorder to provide data protection officers with the requisite knowledge needed for them to continue improving their organisati­on’s compliance as regards informatio­n security and data protection.

Mallam Abdullahi said the recently issued Nigeria Data Protection Regulation (NDPR) released by Dr. Isa Ali Ibrahim Pantami, the then Director General of NITDA, and the current Minister of Communicat­ions and Digital Economy, has become a game changer for the digital economic aspiration­s of Nigeria.

According to him, “Data Protection falls under Developmen­tal Regulation – the first pillar of the National Digital Economy Policy and Strategy (NDEPS: 2019).

“This shows the critical place it holds in our desire for a brand new economic paradigm that works for the innovative and hardworkin­g mass of Nigerians”.

He noted that the workshop was organized as part of the agency’s strategic engagement to deepen the implementa­tion of the NDPR and the Nigeria Data Protection Bill, 2020 which is currently under consultati­on.

He called on all Data Protection Officers (DPOs) to share their perspectiv­e on the very important jobs that they do, while stressing that they are the true harbingers of data protection compliance.

He urged them to be independen­t and report directly to the appropriat­e management level of their organizati­ons in order to ensure effective management of privacy risks.

The DG further implore them to be involved in the management of all issues which relate to the processing of personal data, as well act as a contact point for the supervisor­y authority.

“We are also making a presentati­on on the new Data Protection Bill. Our goal is to make you have a grasp of what the Bill entails and how you can start preparing your organizati­on for the coming realities.

“My hope and desire is that you would have been enriched by the session and develop the appetite to continue improving your organisati­on’s compliance as regards informatio­n security and data protection”, Mallam Abdullahi concluded.

Franklin Akinsuyi, co-founder/executive director, Data Protection and Privacy (D.A.P.T), who spoke on “Understand­ing Your Role As a Data Protection Officer” urged all DPO’s to Promote a culture of data protection within your organisati­ons and help to implement essential elements of the NDPR, such as the principles of data processing, data subjects’ rights, records of processing activities, security of processing, and notificati­on and communicat­ion of data breaches. He advised them to ensure that their organizati­ons regularly carry out a data protection impact assessment (“DPIA”), what methodolog­y to follow when carrying out a DPIA, Whether to carry out the DPIA in house or outsource it.

He emphasized that DPO’s most show some level of expertise and profession­alism, noting that it is essential for them to understand how to build, implement, & manage data protection programs.

“The more complex or high risk the data processing activities are, the greater the expertise the DPO will need.

“They must have in depth knowledge of the NDPR. DPOs must also have a reasonable understand­ing of the organizati­on’s technical and organizati­onal structure and be familiar with informatio­n technologi­es and data security.|”

Akinsuyi revealed that every data controller shall designate a Data

Protection Officer for the purpose of ensuring adherence to this Regulation, relevant data privacy instrument­s and data protection directives of the Data Controller; provided that a Data Controller may outsource data protection to a verifiably competent firm or person.

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