HomeCover StoriesPolice, DSS have access to Nigerians' personal information— Pantami

Police, DSS have access to Nigerians’ personal information— Pantami

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The Minister of Communications and Digital Economy, Prof. Isa Pantami disclosed this on Tuesday at the launch of the Strategic Vision Plan 2021- 2025, organised by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) in Abuja.

The Nigerian Government has said its security agencies have access to information on Nigerians through their mobile phones.

Pantami, however, noted that as a minister, he could not grant requests for such personal information from individuals and groups.

According to him, it is the Cybercrime 2015 Act and other similar legislation of the commission that grants the government the power to provide biodata of individuals through interception by security agencies.

He identified the police and the Department of State Services (DSS) as capable of providing such information when it involves the security of lives and property.

The Minister of Communications and Digital Economy, Prof. Isa Pantami disclosed this on Tuesday at the launch of the Strategic Vision Plan 2021- 2025, organised by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) in Abuja.

The minister also noted that it is sometimes not easy to get the biodata or information on bandits because they use their victims’ phones to call their families to demand ransom.

He said, “If somebody is kidnapped, it is not your right to write to NCC, the supervisory minister or ministry to request for the identity of the number. When something happens and a phone number is involved, your function is to transmit that number to security agencies like the police or DSS, go to them to state what happened and they know the procedure which they communicate to the NCC or technology agencies, it is their mandate to provide what is required.

“If we say that anybody can approach us for biodata of any SIM, definitely, it is going to be abused, it is because of this that it is only the security institutions that have the power to ask for that information.”

“Today, criminals mount roadblocks on the highways and seize telephones from travellers, sometimes they use the phones to contact their relatives. When it is presented, you will discover that the information is of the kidnapped victims but not the kidnappers,” he added. [SR]

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