Failure of SIM-NIN linkage to nail kidnappers // Breaking News Now
Failure of SIM-NIN linkage to nail kidnappers
SEVERAL media reports since
July this year have confirmed that the much-vaunted linkage of the Subscriber
Identification Module, SIM, with the National Identity Number, NIN, has
failed to achieve its objective of helping to nail terrorists, bandits and kidnappers.
The Federal Government felt that its efforts to curtail
‘Bandits’ terrorising the North West and parts of the North Central failed
because the criminals were able to freely use their GSM phones to call
relatives of their kidnapped victims for ransoms.
The Ministry of Communications issued a directive, mandating the
linkage of the SIMs to NINs for easy tracing and apprehension of these
terrorists.
Indeed, it went ahead to give
several deadlines for the nationwide implementation of the directive. While
Nigerians were still struggling to recover from the coronavirus pandemic and
the #EndSARS crisis, the Federal Government approved a December 30, 2020
deadline for linkage of the SIMs to NINs or owners would lose their phone
numbers. It went on to extend the deadline five times, with the latest being
October 30, 2021.
Nobody is arguing against the laudable policy to link the SIMs
and NINs. It should help in solidifying our identity and security systems and
upgrading the quality of governance if the government itself is serious about
exploiting its advantages.
But from all indications, the
government has not shown its ability or willingness to tap into the strengths
of the linkage. The criminals holding their captives in the forests have
continued to freely use their lines to conduct what some regime officials have
cynically described as “transactional business”.
Reports indicate that when the captives are released after
paying huge ransoms, security officials still fail to act even when the phone
numbers of the terrorists are given to them.
It is the job of these
agencies, in collaboration with the telecom service providers, to nail
terrorists and kidnappers who make telephone calls. A situation whereby they
fail to act even when the numbers of the criminals are given to them shows that
the SIM-NIN linkage policy has failed even before it is completed.
Officials are not doing their jobs. Two reasons can be adduced
for this. It is either that some officials are hands-in-gloves with the
criminals for selfish benefits and at the innocent citizens’ expense, or there
is an atmosphere of general alienation and disgruntlement among security and
defence personnel. It could be both.
We are surely reaping the
detriment of putting our military, police and other security agencies in the
hands of people from a section of the country. This leaves them free to do
whatever they like with our country, while the personnel from the rest of the
country are discontented.
For Nigeria to work again, we must dump this regime’s extreme
nepotism policies.
Nigeria security related
news
Stay tune
No comments