The Nigeria Communications Commission has announced that telecommunication companies will be disconnecting additional SIM numbers that are not linked to National Identification Numbers (NIN) on Friday, March 29, 2024.
The Director of Public Publicity at the NCC, Reuben Mouka, noted that there would be no changes to the deadline for the next phase of disconnection, PUNCH reports.
The NCC’s directive for disconnection is being rolled out in stages, with the second phase set for March 29, 2024, continuing as previously announced.
The initial phase took place on February 28, 2024. Subsequently, whilethe third phase is slated to begin on April 15, 2024.
“We issued a publication that you can refer to. We specified certain deadlines and stipulated that subscribers who do not comply with the directive would be barred. And that has not changed.”
Mouka said at the last deadline on February 28, 2024, about 40 million lines that were not linked to NIN were barred.
MTN Nigeria reported that over 4.2 million lines were disconnected from its network after the February 28 deadline.
The NCC has reiterated its commitment to enforcing regulatory measures aimed at enhancing security and regulatory compliance within the telecommunications sector.
The SIM-NIN linkage initiative is a crucial step towards improving the integrity of subscriber data and enhancing security measures within the telecommunications industry.
The NIN-SIM linkage policy was initially introduced by the Nigerian government in December 2020. This directive requires all telephone line users in Nigeria to associate their SIM cards with their NIN.
In December of the previous year, the NCC issued a directive stipulating that all telecommunications operators in Nigeria, including major providers like MTN, Airtel, and Globacom, among others, must enforce complete network barring on all phone lines for which subscribers have not provided their NINs by February 28, 2024.
Barely two weeks ago, the Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project issued a warning to take legal action against the NCC if it did not revoke the directive instructing network providers to block the phone lines of individuals who have not linked their SIM cards to their NINs.