Nigeria to deploy robots, artificial intelligence to fight criminals – Senate
(Nigeria) The Senate on Wednesday said that the Ministry of
Communications and Digital Economy has established a centre for artificial
intelligence and robotics to deploy the use of robots and artificial
intelligence in combating crime and criminality in Nigeria.
The revelation came to the fore when the upper chamber
considered a report on ‘the spate of growing insecurity in Nigeria’ by the
Joint Committee on Legislative Compliance and Communications during plenary.
The Chairman of the Joint Committee, Senator Adelere Oriolowo
(APC, Osun West), in his presentation, further revealed that the SIM
registration exercise by the Ministry of Communications and Digital Economy,
which makes the provision of the National Identity Number compulsory, has
drastically reduced the use of phones by kidnappers for the purpose of
negotiations.
According to him, the earlier successes of the SIM
registration were compromised by the numerous agents recruited by the
communications companies that register SIM card owners across the 774 local
government areas of Nigeria.
He, however, explained that this led the Ministry of
Communications and Digital Economy to seek Presidential approval for the
temporary suspension of the sale of SIM cards in Nigeria and for the merger of
all SIMS to the National Identity Numbers of their respective owners.
He added that the Joint Committee also found that there were other programs and projects by the Ministry and its agencies to support security agencies in fighting crime.
Oloriowo disclosed that a total of twenty-three Emergency
Communication Centres using the 112 code have been commissioned, with an
additional 12 almost ready for commissioning.
“The goal, according to the Minister, is to have at least
one Emergency Communication Centre in every State of the Federation, by the
first quarter of 2022.
“The Emergency Communication Centres, are supposed to be
multipurpose Centres for emergencies and platforms for Nigerians to access and
connect to relevant institutions like the Fire Service, National Emergency
Management Authority, NEMA and the Police, as well as other security agencies.
“These emergency lines are toll-free lines and their
effectiveness has been well reported across the country, including its
usefulness, during the COVID-19 lockdown,” Oriolowo added.
He lamented that the inability of the Ministry of
Communications and its agencies to provide necessary information from the phone
database in cases of crime such as kidnapping stems from its lack of statutory
mandate to do so, except after due request and application for such information
by security agencies.
Accordingly, the Senate while adopting the recommendations
of the Joint Committee, urged the Federal Ministry of Communications and
Digital Economy to submit a proposal for legislative action to any Section(s)
of the extant laws of any of its agencies towards reducing the nation’s
security challenges.
It also urged security agencies such as the Ministries of
Defence, Interior, Police Affairs, the Office of the National Security Adviser,
the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, the Department of State
Security Services, the Nigeria Police Force, Nigeria Customs Services, and the
Nigerian Immigration Service to collaborate with the Federal Ministry of
Communications and Digital Economy by contracting its when a crime has been
aided and abetted through the use of SIM cards.
He explained that putting the Ministry in the loop would
also give it the ability to monitor the regulators and their compliance with
the directives to provide the full profile of any subscriber that is being
investigated for crime(s) by security agencies.
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