Audio By Carbonatix
Vice President Dr Mahamudu Bawumia is expected to launch the cybersecurity guideline for commercial banks as part of the Cyber Security Month celebration beginning next week.
The guideline seeks to promote the voluntary information sharing on customer database and ensure that incidence of cyber-attacks within the financial sector is reduced.
In 2017, 1,418 financial fraud cases were reported to the bank of Ghana representing 42 per cent compared to 1001 cases which presented 41.66 per cent in 2016.
Attempted fraud same year, amounted to Gh₵190.38 million out of which Gh₵160.30 million were recovered.
According to the National Cyber Security centre, Ghana’s cyber arena has recorded significant developments within the last 18 months with the introduction of paperless ports processes, digital property addressing system, mobile money interoperability systems and the ongoing national identification system (Ghana Card), amongst others.
These interventions call for an increased awareness of potential crime in the cyberspace.
National Cyber Security Advisor, Albert Antwi-Boasiaku told JoyBusiness the guidelines to be launched by the Vice President will not be to prescribe punitive measures for the financial operators but to assist in preventing cyber fraud.
“We need to look at different models of achieving enforcement in the fight against cybersecurity ecosystem; punitive in the directive may be the last result rather a voluntary and promoting approach is what the Bank of Ghana’s guideline seeks,” he said.
The guideline will be launched as part of the cybersecurity awareness month celebration; an annual event celebrated across the globe.
In Ghana, the month of October has been earmarked for awareness creation expected to be launched October 1 under the theme, "A safer digital Ghana".
The nationwide event is organised by the Ministry of Communication and the National Cyber Security Centre.
The National Cyber Security Advisor noted, “Ghana as a country needs to increase awareness of the negative effect and ways of curbing cybercrime.”
Activities for the month-long event will include workshops and conferences on child online protection, Cyber Hygiene and Awareness, Cyber Security & the Youth, Cyber Security Solutions, Capacity Building and among others.
National Cyber Security Awareness event was first organized by the Ministry of Communications in November 2016.
Latest Stories
-
School of Thoughts Ghana empowers Upper West students with AI, leadership, and market-ready skills
8 minutes -
Wa East MP injects GH¢100,000 into road programme to boost infrastructure works
9 minutes -
Ayine, Afenyo-Markin to headline African Governance and Anti-Corruption Summit in Accra
11 minutes -
Sissala East MP secures 15 new telecom sites to improve network coverage
12 minutes -
Fidelity Bank Atta Gyan calls for structural solutions to unlock capital for Ghana’s productive sectors
18 minutes -
Avenor collapsed building had weak concrete, no engineering oversight — GhIE
21 minutes -
MobileMoney Fintech calls Extraordinary General Meeting for June 12
29 minutes -
Why discipline, not ambition, will decide Ghana’s next business winners
34 minutes -
Preliminary probe points to lack of permit in Avenor building collapse
50 minutes -
Today’s Front pages: Monday, June 8, 2026
1 hour -
Former PMMC CEO rejects pay-to-play award schemes, advocates service-driven leadership
1 hour -
Mahama pushes for stronger Ghana-Belarus partnership in agriculture, mining and manufacturing
1 hour -
Mahama heads to Minsk talks seeking stronger Ghana-Belarus economic ties
1 hour -
World Food Safety Day 2026 – Accra Metro Health Director calls for action on foodborne diseases in Ghana
1 hour -
Our exploding healthcare management issues and loss of Ghanaian lives
1 hour