At last, Senate passes Cyber Crime bill into law
When Nigeria’s telecoms revolution took off after the licensing of GSM
operators in 2001, it heralded positive developments for Nigerians as a
people, and the economy in general. Communications among Nigerians and
between Nigeria and the rest of the world, which was very difficult,
became simplified almost overnight..
In no time, computers with internet
connections became ubiquitous, and with the coming of data services,
devices with mobile internet capability became choice attraction. When
the tablet computer took the world by storm, Nigeria and Nigerians were
not left out as tablets of various brands found their way to Nigeria,
and were promptly gobbled up by a population whose desire to communicate
became almost insatiable.
Thus, Nigerians joined the rest of the
world in being active in cyberspace. Thousands, even millions, opened
email accounts, and started playing games online. E-commerce gained
ground, and online retailers are smiling to the banks. But like every
good thing, the ugly came with it.
Scammers started operating in
cyberspace, ripping off the unwary. While the Police and other
law-enforcement agents tried their best, a major flaw existed: there was
simply no law that captures cybercrime and prescribes punishment for
cyber criminals.
It was this that prompted many interest groups in
the ICT arena to clamour for a cyber crime law to regulate activities in
the sector as well as to take care of the criminally-minded.
Only recently, the Senate passed the long-awaited Cyber Crime Bill into law.
It would be recalled that in the past 10 years, several bills on
cybercrime had been pushed to the National Assembly by the Nigerian
Information Technology experts, but none scaled through the final
reading on the floor of the Senate.
Many of the bills did not even
get a mention, but recently, one of the bills eventually passed through
the final reading and was approved by Senate, a development that has
drawn commendations from ICT professionals in the country.
In
2011, Senator Gbenga Kaka (APC, Ogun East) had presented a bill to stop
cybercrime. But the bill came under controversy due to a section related
to social media.
In January, President Goodluck Jonathan in the
bill titled, “Cybercrime Bill, 2013”, which was routed through the
Senate President, David Mark, had urged members of the upper legislative
chamber to consider its enactment into law.
The bill introduced
July 28, 2011, was targeted at curbing the activities of internet
scammers, who always give the country bad name, both locally and
internationally.
Cybercrime
Cybercrime is a term for any illegal
activity that uses a computer as its primary means. It also includes
any illegal activity that uses a computer for the storage of evidence.
Cybercrimes include crimes that have been made possible by computers,
such as network intrusions and the dissemination of computer viruses, as
well as computer-based variations of existing crimes, such as identity
theft, stalking, bullying and terrorism.
The passage of the bill is
also part of the continuation of measures towards safeguarding the
nation’s presence in cyberspace while ensuring protection of critical
national information infrastructure. Accordingly, the bill provides for
the prohibition, prevention, detection, response, investigation and
prosecution of Cyber Crimes and for other related matters, 2014.
Boosts Nigeria’s image
One thing is clear with the passage of the bill. Cyber crimes,
especially the advanced fee fraud popularly known as419are expected to
be reduced to the barest minimum.
Similarly, with the passage of the
bill, notable official government websites including that of National
Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA), the country’s
clearing house for IT projects will now be adequately protected..
Meanwhile, chairman of the Senate Committee, Sen. Umaru Dahiru, while
presenting the report before the Senate for consideration and passage
said that the bill seeks to provide a legal framework for the
implementation and evaluation of response and preventive measures in the
fight against cyber crime in line with international best practices.
Provisions of the law
It provides a legal framework for the prohibition and punishment of
electronic fraud and cybercrime whilst promoting e-government services,
electronic communications and transactions between public and private
bodies as well as institutions and individuals.
The law has
criminalized certain acts and omissions in line with regional and
international best practices and provide procedural guidelines for the
investigation of such offences.
It also defines the liability of
service providers and ensures that national interest is not compromised
by the use of electronic communications. Meanwhile, Deputy Senate
President, Ike Ekweremadu, who presided over the plenary session of the
Senate on Thursday, 23 October, put the question on the bill that sailed
through third reading and was thus passed. Ekweremadu noted that the
Bill would go a long way in fighting corruption as well as reduce to the
barest minimum the rate of cyber-crime in Nigeria.
Stakeholders react
Commending the passage of the Cybercrime Bill into law, CEO of Mobile
Software Solutions, Chris Uwaje however noted that the law is
fundamentally flawed by the fact that the foundation for the ICT
Legislation Architecture for Nigeria which is the “National Information
Technology (IT) Bill” and its enabling Acts- has not been laid.
For
Lanre Ajayi, ATCON President, the passage of the bill is welcome ,
adding that it would boost e-commerce. Similarly, Jimson Olufuye,
chairman of the Africa ICT Alliance, also commended passage of the bill,
noting that what is critical is smooth, full implementation of its
provisions.
Speaking on the new development, Jide Awe, Chairman
Publicity, Trade and Event Committee of Nigeria Computer Society
believes that the bill requires the President’s assent to become law.
“Cybersecurity legislation is however long overdue” he said. The
political class has actually been quite slow and it is about having an
appreciation of the damage absence of cyber legislation does to a nation
and its people.
Provides for a safe digital environment
“Effective enforcement will deter and penalize cyber mischief, and stem
the negative misconceptions about the Nigerian nation in the foreign
media and community.
11/05/2014
At last, Senate passes Cyber Crime bill into law
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