The MP for Ningo-Prampram, Sam Nartey George, has pointed out the imprudence of implementing the September 30 deadline for SIM card re-registration.
Mr. Nartey George explained that the deadline is not feasible because the implications will be too consequential.
“A deadline in itself will not fix the problem. Deadlines will not produce the Ghana Cards. The National Security is minded by this,” he opined.
It would be recalled that, speaking at a press briefing on Sunday July 31, the Communications and Digitalisation Minister, extended the deadline for SIM card re-registration from July 31, to September 30, 2022 “reluctantly”.
“Upon consultation with the industry and in view of the challenges enumerated above, I have very reluctantly decided to grant a conditional extension. The programme will be extended to 30th September to end on the anniversary of its commencement,” she announced.
This was followed by the blockage of SIM cards that had not been re-registered as at September 5 by the National Communication Authority (NCA).
In this regard, Mrs. Owusu-Ekuful on September 7, wrote in a Facebook post that, “At a subsequent press conference in September, the full scope of the sanctions will be revealed. If you suffer that fate as a result of your own inaction, kindly do not blame your service provider. To be forewarned is to be forearmed”.
Additionally, any SIM that has not yet been completely registered will be unable to use voice and Internet services. Afterward, using unregistered SIMs will be more expensive”.
In reaction, Mr. George in an interview on Joy FM’s Super Morning Show on September 13, said the implications of not extending the deadline will among others, affect government’s negotiations with the IMF for support.
“You see she tried to block SIM cards two days in the last week. The NCA, they issued a public statement, but when they were rescinding the decision to the Telco’s they did it Nicodemusly- in the quiet of the night. And now they are saying they are no longer blocking this week.
“If we have a national security apparatus in this country, they won’t allow that to happen. I can state on authority again, that the actions of the Minister do not just have implications for the service sector. It has implications for Ghana’s own conversations with the IMF as we speak. Because our internal revenue generations, the scenarios have been built and sent to the IMF that this is how much government rakes internally.
“If you block SIM cards of about 3 million Ghanaians, you are talking of about 10 million SIM cards. Those SIM cards when they are used for phone calls generate Communication Service Tax (CST) revenue, when they are used for data generate CST revenue, those who do mobile money generate e-levy. All of those figures are going to drop.
“As we speak, the Minister of Communication has not engaged with the Ministry of Finance to look at what the effect will be on the IMF conversation. That’s why I am saying that the fact that we have a national security… unless they are asleep. They cannot sit back and allow the Minister. What she is doing is digital apartheid. And this is xenophobic in the digital space. The powers that she thinks she has, are regulated by Article 296,” he explained.
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