Isa Pantami, Minister of Communication and Digital Economy, has claimed that the Federal Government has reduced banditry and kidnapping to the barest minimum in the country through the National Identification Number (NIN) policy.
Read Also: I Stayed Away From Buhari Because He Doesn’t Take Advice – Tunde Bakare
Pantami made the claim in Abuja on Thursday, while rendering account of his stewardship since assuming office in 2019.
“When I was assigned to supervise the sector on 24, August 2019, unregistered, and partial registered sims were being used to perpetrate crime in the country. Nobody knew the total number of unregistered sims,” he said.
“Within less than 15 days in the office, we have engaged the NCC as a regulator. We have directed them to carry audit exercise to enable them come up with unregistered and partial registered sims. They came with around 9.4 million which is enough to populate another country. It was the first time we didn’t know the total of unregistered SIMs in the country.
Read Also: Corps Members Part Of Reserve Forces, Can Be Mobilised For Defence Duties – NYSC DG
“And we went further to direct NCC, to ensure that by 25th September 2019, that is only one month few days in office, I spent there to ensure that by end of September 2021, no sim that is not registered will be on our network. NCC as a regulator implemented that effectively.
“From end of September 2019, to 2020, you will discover that even kidnapping and banditry reduced to the barest minimum. It was a time that hardly can you spend one month or more without hearing about kidnapping.
“The more you come up with policies to make the system effective the more criminals will come up with another strategy to compromise the policies.”
Read Also: Those Plotting To Bring Down Buhari’s Govt Will Not Succeed – APC
The minister further explained that before the introduction of the policy, some unscrupulous Nigerians working in cahoots with a handful of agents of telecommunication officials engaged in illegally preregistering SIM cards, which were sold to criminal gangs to perpetrate crime.
Also speaking at the occasion, Professor Umar Danbatta, Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communication Commission (NCC), said criminals are evolving just as the commission and the federal government are working out policies to thwart their plans.
Danbatta said it is sad that kidnappers now use the telephones of their victims to demand and receive ransom, adding that government is doing everything within its power to deal with the situation.