NIN-SIM linkage: SERAP sues Buhari over ‘security agencies’ access to subscribers’ details’
(Nigeria) Socio-Economic
Rights and Accountability Project, SERAP, has filed a suit against President
Muhammadu Buhari over “the failure to review and rescind his reported approval
for security agencies to access people’s personal details via NIN-SIM linkage
without due process of law.”
President Buhari had in February reportedly given his
approval for some security agencies to access the database of the National
Identity Management Commission in the course of carrying out their duties.
But in the suit number FHC/L/CS/448/2022 filed last Friday
at the Federal High Court, Lagos, SERAP is asking the court to determine
“whether the approval for security agencies to access people’s personal details
via the National Identification Number, NIN, without due process is consistent
with the principles of legality, necessity, and proportionality.”
SERAP is asking the court for “an order setting aside
President Buhari’s approval for security agencies to access people’s personal
details via NIN-SIM linkage without due process of law, as this amounts to
violations of private and digital communication rights, right to family life,
human dignity and personal liberty.”
SERAP is also asking the court for “an order of perpetual
injunction restraining the Federal Government or any other authority, persons
or group of persons from unlawfully accessing people’s personal details via
NIN-SIM linkage without due process of the law.”
In the suit, SERAP is arguing that: “If President Buhari’s
approval is not rescinded, millions of law-abiding Nigerians may feel that
their private lives are the subject of constant surveillance.”
SERAP is also arguing that, “In the digital age, protecting
the right to privacy requires exceptional attention. The approval may be used
as a pretext by security agencies to violate Nigerians’ right to privacy and
other related human rights.”
According to SERAP, “Interference with an individual’s right
to privacy is not permissible if it is unlawful or arbitrary.”
SERAP is also seeking “a declaration that President Buhari’s
approval for security agencies to access people’s personal details via NIN-SIM
linkage without due process of law is inconsistent with the principles of
legality, necessity, and proportionality.”
SERAP is further arguing that, “It is crucial to respect the
autonomy of individuals to receive and share information of a personal nature
without interference from the authorities, if unintended adverse consequences
are to be avoided.”
Joined in the suit as respondents are Mr Abubakar Malami,
SAN, Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, and Mr Isa
Pantami, Minister of Communications and Digital Economy.
The suit filed on behalf of SERAP by its lawyers, Kolawole
Oluwadare and Opeyemi Owolabi, read in part: “The right to privacy allows
Nigerians to hold opinions and exercise freedom of expression without arbitrary
or illegal interference and attacks.
“While the effectiveness of the fight against serious crime
may depend to a great extent on the use of modern investigation techniques,
such an objective of general interest, however fundamental it may be, cannot in
itself justify the unlawful or arbitrary interference with the right to
privacy.
“Unlawful or arbitrary access to people’s personal details
would contravene section 37 of the Nigerian Constitution 1999 (as amended),
article 17 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and
article 5 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, which protect
against arbitrary or unlawful interference with one’s privacy.
“The power to access individual’s details raises serious
concerns as to their arbitrary use by the authorities responsible for applying
them in a manner that reduces human rights by the monitoring and surveillance
of millions of Nigerians.
“Violations or abuses of the right to privacy might affect
the enjoyment of other human rights, including the right to freedom of
expression and to hold opinions without interference.
“Private conversations of individuals - which belong to
their intimate sphere and contribute to their personal development - also enjoy
strong legal protection and can only be limited based on the principles of
legality, necessity and proportionality.
“The right to privacy can enable the enjoyment of other
rights and the free development of an individual’s personality and identity,
and an individual’s ability to participate in political, economic, social and
cultural life.
“In relation to the requirement of legality, any limitation must be expressly, exhaustively, precisely, and clearly provided for in a law in the formal and material sense. It is not enough that the restrictions be formally approved by the president or by any other competent body: they must also be sufficiently clear, accessible and predictable.
“The undermining of the universality of fundamental human
rights, alongside the potential encroachment upon the enjoyment of the right to
privacy raised by the presidential approval, shows the need for the approval to
be reversed.
“The relationship between data principals and the
authorities involves a power imbalance. Nigeria ought to provide the leadership
in developing a data protection framework that is fully consistent and
compatible with the protection of the fundamental and inalienable right to
privacy.
“If not reversed, the approval would allow security agencies
to access the data of the over 73 million Nigerians who have linked their
National Identity Number with their SIM, and other people who may do so.”
No date has been fixed for the hearing of the suit.
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