The Federal Government has approved the sum of N1.8 billion for the deployment of regulatory systems in the Nigerian telecommunications industry to tackle call masking and other illegal activities.
Call Masking is described as a phenomenon whereby an international call is masked to appear as a local call on any GSM network in Nigeria.
Nigeria’s Minister of Communications and Digital Economy, Dr. Isa Pantami, disclosed this on Wednesday after the weekly Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting in Abuja.
“The first memo that was approved by the Federal Executive Council is for the deployment of regulatory systems in the telecommunications industry, to be implemented by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC),” Pantami said.
He said the regulatory systems to be deployed would have two components that would help tackle insecurity in the country and improve revenue generation by the government.
“The system has two components; number one is the deployment of a regulatory system to monitor, detect and block SIM box traffic. It is going to be implemented at the cost of N804, 122, 897.50 by NCC,” he said.
“This deployment is to fight what is called voice traffic termination fraud.
“The system will support our country in two major ways of addressing challenges of insecurity because sometimes you will receive a call with a local number that is set up as an international number; sometimes, a call can come in, but the number will not show; sometimes you will receive a call with a cloned number, so you need to investigate further to know who actually made the call.
“So using these systems, the NCC will be able to immediately address such criminal tendencies on behalf of the Nigerian government.
“The second one in the same memo is the deployment of a regulatory system to monitor, detect and block call masking traffic at the cost of N1,049,790,713.58.
“They are all forms of fraud committed by criminals. This will enhance revenue generation by our government because the use of any international number will attract higher tax but if it appears as a local number, the government would be short-changed.”
Pantami said systems would enhance the security of Nigerian citizens, especially mobile phone users.
Speaking on further approvals obtained, the minister said: “In this phase of President Buhari’s intervention an approval has been granted to the NCC at today’s cabinet meeting to distribute 6000 e-pad mobile devices to higher institutions all over the country.”
“In the northern part of the country, 2400 of such devices would be distributed; the same number for the Southern part and a special allocation for Abuja and Lagos, where both of them are going to share the remaining 120.”