Audio By Carbonatix
A Policy analyst says brewing friction between the National Communication Authority (NCA) and the National Identification Authority (NIA) is to blame for the difficulties citizens are having with the SIM card re-registration process.
Dr Charles Wereko-Brobby described as tragic the seeming conflict between the two-state regulators.
According to him, if the Authorities should liaise with each other, the SIM card re-registration exercise would be easier for the populace.
“If the NCA was in sync with the NIA, there could be an arrangement where the NIA could furnish the NCA with the periodic update of those who have registered and have been issued their Ghana Card," he said on Monday.
"And the NCA, having obtained that list, can actually say to the newly registered that they’ve got six weeks to make sure to link their SIM card to the Ghana Card."
He was speaking on Joy FM’s Super Morning Show on Monday.
Citing arrangements between the financial institutions and NIA, Dr Wereko-Brobby said the banks have cooperated with the Authority to make the Ghana Card a basic requirement for all transactions.
This, he noted, could be emulated by the NCA in the ongoing SIM card re-registration exercise.
"NCA is simply not talking to the NIA, and has contracted third-party to do things the NIA is saying ‘I cannot vouch for the data and biometric that is being generated by somebody else.’
“Now, this is a turf war, and this is the real meaning of when two elephants fight; we the ‘grasses’ suffer,” he noted.
Many people have been struggling to re-register their cards as required by the Ministry of Communication and Digitalisation.
The exercise was scheduled to end on Sunday, July 31, 2022 but has been extended to September 30, 2022.
But for the extension, about 7.9m Ghanaians would have lost their SIM cards.
Speaking at a press briefing on Sunday, the Communications and Digitalisation Minister, Ursula Owusu-Ekuful, said the extension followed consultations with industry stakeholders.
“Upon consultation with the industry and in view of the challenges enumerated above, I have very reluctantly decided to grant a conditional extension. The programme will be extended to 30th September to end on the anniversary of its commencement.”
“That will give us one full year of SIM registration. It will be reviewed at the end of this month and any SIM that has not been fully registered by the end of August will be barred from receiving certain services including voice and data services,” she said
However, Dr Wereko-Brobby is against the Ministry adding a deadline to the exercise.
According to him, since the primary product needed for the re-registration process – Ghana Card – does not have a deadline, it will be inconsiderate to have deadlines for the exercise.
"The logic of the situation that we are faced with is that, an organization which is not bound by deadlines cannot be forced to produce data or have its product subjected to deadlines by other people," he stressed.
Latest Stories
-
NPA pushes back on proposals to scrap Fuel Price Floor Policy
10 minutes -
Stanbic Bank Ghana begins 2026 with thanksgiving service; reaffirms support for Ghana’s economic recovery
59 minutes -
Nigerian imam honoured for saving Christian lives dies aged 90
1 hour -
What a seventh term for 81-year-old leader means for Uganda
1 hour -
AFCON: ‘Shameful’ and ‘terrible look’ – the chaos that marred Senegal’s triumph
2 hours -
Rashford scores but Barca lose to 10-man Sociedad
2 hours -
Diaz will ‘have nightmares’ over ‘Panenka’ failure
2 hours -
Tragic death of Chimamanda Adichie’s young son pushes Nigeria to act on health sector failings
2 hours -
‘I want to show the world what Africa is’: YouTube star brings joy and tears on tour
2 hours -
‘An ambassador for African football’ – Mane is Senegal’s Afcon hero
3 hours -
‘Europe won’t be blackmailed,’ Danish PM says in wake of Trump Greenland threats
5 hours -
Three admit £70m tree planting pension fraud in UK
5 hours -
How crypto criminals stole $700m from people – often using age-old tricks
5 hours -
Construction emissions pose rising climate risk, Scientists Say
5 hours -
At least 21 killed in Spain after crash involving high-speed trains
5 hours
