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NCC wants government to leverage ICT in fight against insurgency, emergencies

By Adeyemi Adepetun
05 February 2020   |   4:06 am
The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has said that Nigeria can leverage emerging technologies, and deploy telecommunications resources in the fight against insurgency, and to contain other rising emergencies in the country.

Danbatta

The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has said that Nigeria can leverage emerging technologies, and deploy telecommunications resources in the fight against insurgency, and to contain other rising emergencies in the country.

The Executive Vice Chairman, NCC, Prof. Umar Danbatta, who said this, affirmed the empirical knowledge of what information and communications technology (ICT) can do in tackling numerous challenges.

He explained the Commission’s insistence on compliance by all stakeholders to the guidelines governing subscriber identity module (SIM) registration, and why NCC had been upbeat in getting the Emergency Communication Centres (ECC) ready all over Nigeria, as directed by the Federal Government.

Danbatta said this at the weekend, in Abuja, at the induction of the Commission to the membership of Forum of Spokespersons of Security and Response Agencies (FOSSRA). Bassey Uket, a Principal Manager, Special Duties Department, is NCC’s representative at the Forum.

Danbatta recalled the collaboration between NCC and the security and other emergency response agencies especially at the ECCs and suggest that many of the multi-faceted challenges can be addressed with scaling up the degree of deployment of electronic strategies.

To underscore the imperative of electronic and digital communication systems in managing the nation’s security challenges, Danbatta noted that “as we are addressing the situation in one part of the country, you find escalation in another part.”

He gave example of the 112 Emergency Communication Numbers, which are routed to the ECCs, as “a practical implementation of a security system that is bringing succour to citizens in distress.”

He added that he was gratified that there is an increasing “interface between citizens who are in distressed security situation, and virtually all security and other emergency response agencies connected to it.”

Danbatta described the ECCs as a well-conceived project, saying they have enhanced the capacity of agencies in the security governance sector to manage crises.

He informed the audience that the Centres are well-equipped to address the purpose for which they were established, with 18 located in state capitals, have been completed, and assured that with the support of the Federal Government, “we are not going to stop.”

He continued, “We would like to express our commitment to continue with the remaining 18. We would not rest on our oars until all other 18 are fully functional, because the ECCs have started attracting attention, and are quite central to the management of security in the country.”

He emphasised that the ECCs have become a success story today, because of the commitment of the Federal Government, and the culture of dedication to continuity of strategic national projects by successive leadership of the Commission.

Earlier, Director, Special Duties, NCC, Oluwatoyin Asaju, said FOSSRA, which was established six years ago by the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA), has performed well in coordinating public information activities of security and emergency response agencies, and has helped to improve inter-agency collaboration.

He said the induction of NCC into the forum is a testimony to the Commission’s strides in this regard, and also the visionary leadership of Danbatta.

He recalled the nature of operation and kind of facilities at the ECCs, and urged Nigerians to use the Toll-Free 3-Digit Emergency Communication Numbers, 112, to get help in times of security challenges.

Director, Defence Information and Chairman of FOSSRA, Brigadier Onyema Nwachukwu, told participants at the meeting that crisis is not peculiar to Nigeria, and the present escalating trend speaks to emergent global culture where non-state actors resort to violence to express grievances.

He said agencies in the security sector are working all-round-the-clock to improve Nigeria’s security situation, adding that FOSSRA’s role is to bring the public to speed on the activities of the security forces.

He affirmed that other issues needed to be addressed for the physical security are provided by the armed forces to have better impact.

“One of these issues is national mobilisation of the mass media around issues of security. Therefore, developing a national networking strategy of all stakeholders is important to address other challenges, just as the challenge of inter-agency cooperation and collaboration among the security forces had been addressed.

Air Commodore Yusuf Anas (rtd), the Executive Secretary of Crisis Communication Centre (CCC), also spoke about the efforts of FOSSRA, in rallying information and communication stakeholders to ensure appropriate crisis communication management.

Anas expressed the gratitude of the Centre and other partners to NCC for the vital roles the Commission had played in enhancing the management of the nation’s security communication programmes.

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