The Nigerian Communications Commission
uses sanctions to ensure that telecommunications operators comply with
regulations, guidelines and directives, the Executive Vice Chairman,
NCC, Prof. Umar Danbatta, has said.
Danbatta, who spoke at the first Annual
Conference on Combatting Financial Fraud, Cybercrime and other
Cross-border Crimes in Abuja on Thursday, was represented by the Head,
Legal and Regulatory Services, NCC, Mrs. Yetunde Akinloye.
He said in any environment where
investment, innovation and issues of competition were rooted, there was
bound to be contraventions, thus the need to issue sanctions and enforce
compliance.
Danbatta said, “The NCC dutifully
employs sanctions and enforcement mechanisms to regulate the industry.
The Nigerian Communications Act mandated the NCC to enforce compliance
by any means lawful in the event of contravention of the Act, or any of
its regulations, guidelines or the terms and conditions of an issued
licence or direction.
“Sanction here refers to either
financial sanction or criminal sanction. It may include but not limited
to suspension or revocation of licence, criminal or civil proceedings
against any person who committed the contravention, and any
administrative action by the NCC. It is meant to deter wrongdoing.
“Other enforcement measures may include
sealing and confiscation of equipment, desist order, forfeiture, and
denial of regulatory services etc. Accordingly, effective exercise of
enforcement powers and application of appropriate sanctions by the
regulator against erring service providers is solely meant to sanitise
the telecommunications industry and provide good playing field for
investment.”
Apart from sanctions and enforcement,
Danbatta said the commission had the powers to formally request any
service provider to assist it or any other authority in preventing the
commission or attempted commission of any offence.
When asked questions specifically on the
N1.04tn fine imposed on MTN Nigeria for its failure to properly
register 5.1 million subscribers, Danbatta declined to comment on the
grounds that the issue was in court.
However, a former Executive Chairman of
the commission, Dr. Bashir Gwandu, who chaired the session, said
excessive fines on the operators had the capacity to discourage
investment in an economy.
BY
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