The National Association of Telecommunications Subscribers has appealed to the Nigerian Communications Commission for an extension of the NIN-SIM Linkage deadline from September 14 to September 30.
The National President of NATCOMS, Mr Deolu Ogunbanjo, stated in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria on Sunday that an extension was wanted attributable to challenges with the National Identity Management Commission’s portal.
NAN studies that the NCC had set a deadline of September 14, 2024, for all cellular customers to hyperlink their SIMs to their National Identification Numbers.
The NCC confused the significance of the NIN-SIM linkage for enhancing digital safety and lowering fraud and cybercrime.
Ogunbanjo acknowledged that the two-week extension was mandatory for NIMC to extend the capability of its portal, including that telecom operators at buyer centres usually struggled to add data on the NIMC portal.
He stated that difficulties in importing on the NIMC portal had annoyed the method and triggered delays.
“As I visited the client centres of Airtel and MTN, I witnessed firsthand the struggles they confronted in importing knowledge to the NIMC portal.
“The congestion was palpable, and the gradual tempo of uploads was irritating.
“It was clear that the NIMC portal lacked the capability to deal with the surge in uploads, inflicting undue stress for telecom operators and their subscribers.
“I’m interesting to the NCC to grant an extension of the deadline to September 30, to permit extra time for NIMC to increase its portal capability.
Ogunbanjo stated that this could alleviate the present difficulties and guarantee a smoother expertise for all stakeholders.
In a NAN examine at some buyer centres, a meals vendor, Mrs Zainab Olajide, stated that though the method of linking and unblocking her SIM was seamless, the operators on the centre demanded N1,000 earlier than attending to her.
Olajide stated that failure to pay meant the client wouldn’t be attended to, including that the brokers on the centre took benefit of the scenario as a result of crowd.
She stated that though she arrived on the centre at 10 a.m., her quantity was 282, and she or he pleaded for an extension of the deadline to permit extra individuals to get again on-line.
Also, a guide, Mr Clement Umeadi, decried the extortion that happened at his buyer centre in Alagbado.
Umeadi stated that what irritated him most was paying N2,000 to unblock his two barred traces.
He confused that the NIN-SIM linkage must be a steady course of with no set deadline, arguing that such deadlines inspired unwholesome practices.
Additionally, at a buyer centre in Opebi, an accountant, Josh Manuel, stated the registration course of was seamless. He added that regardless of the gang, there was orderliness and efficient administration.
He stated that the brokers have been skilled in dealing with the method and no cash was demanded.
“I was compelled to appreciate the staff I met, especially the security, for their professionalism in handling the crowd,” he stated.
A workers member on the buyer centre, who most popular to stay nameless, stated that the adherence of subscribers to the deadline was spectacular.
She stated that, prior to the current extension, subscribers have been within the behavior of dashing on the final minute, however this was not the case on the centre.
A instructor, Mrs Olushola Oke, lamented the gradual tempo of uploads at a buyer centre in Ogba.
Oke stated that the gang on the centre was as a result of gradual tempo of labor, which was irritating.
According to her, it was solely after her third early morning go to to the centre that her line was unblocked.
She known as for an extension of the train to allow extra individuals to have their traces unblocked, particularly those that had skilled comparable delays.
An agent on the buyer centre in Ogba, Mr Quadri Adegoke, advised NAN that verification on the NIMC portal was not encouraging.
Adegoke stated this had slowed the tempo of labor and made the complete course of irritating.
He stated it was onerous to find out whether or not the gradual uploads have been attributable to ongoing building work within the space that may have interfered with the community or the visitors on NIMC’s web site.
NAN