Customers at a Safaricom shop in Nakuru. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Mobile operators have until Friday to remove unregistered
subscribers and those listed using fraudulent documents from their
networks or face fines of up to 0.2 per cent of their annual sales.
The
Communications Authority of Kenya (CA) said a forensic audit on the
mobile networks of Safaricom, Airtel and Telkom Kenya revealed that
information on subscribers was based on inaccurate and incomplete data
as well unregistered SIM cards, aiding criminal activities.
Anomalies
unravelled include SIM cards with multiple registrations under
different identity details, serial number length variance in
registrations using passports and alien IDs as well as lack of control
of the operators on their agents.
“We have asked the
mobile operators to comply by cleaning up their data bases through
ensuring that they switch off any fraudulently registered SIM cards. We
have given them up to the end of this week to comply,” said CA director
general Francis Wangusi.
The Kenya Information and
Communications (Registration of SIM-cards) Regulations 2015 allow a
telecommunications operator or the CA to deactivate a subscriber’s
SIM-card on establishment that false information was provided in
registering it.
Under the SIM-card registration
regulations, the subscribers must appear in person to provide correct
information. Incorrect information is an offense that attracts a fine of
Sh100,000, or six months imprisonment.
The sector regulator has also directed telecommunications firms
including Safaricom, Airtel and Telkom Kenya to submit details of agents
and sub-agents that deal in sales and subscriber registration on their
behalf.
The details required include the company
registration details, number of outlets and locations in which they
operate, duration in which such agents have been in operation, contacts
details and ownership details.
This follows revelations
that operator-agent agreements are purely commercial and do not place
any obligations on the agents with respect to adherence to the SIM card
regulations. “This is a dangerous trend that jeopardises the security of
citizens in the country and must therefore stop,” said Dr Wangusi at a
press briefing yesterday.
The law requires
telecommunications firms or their appointed agents to register SIM card
owners after noting down their full name, identity card number, date of
birth, gender, physical and postal address.
The CA has
further directed mobile operators to ensure agents verify identification
documents with the Integrated Population Registration System (IPRS)
when subscribers present them at the time of registration.
The
CA commissioned the audit in the wake of rampant hawking of SIM cards,
which is illegal. The practice has seen the resurgence of a scam
involving swapping of SIM cards by fraudsters to swindle money from
unsuspecting mobile subscribers. In the case of SIM card swap, a
fraudster usually makes a call pretending to be an employee of a mobile
network.
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