Professor Joseph A. Cannataci
By Jemina Esinam Kuatsinu
The
United Nations (UN) Special Rapporteur on Privacy, Professor Joseph A.
Cannataci, has advised the Data Protection Commission (DPC) to take
necessary measures to ensure people's data is not...
abused.
He said data was a
valuable asset that could be abused knowingly or unknowingly, hence
safeguards should be in place so that the citizenry would be assured
that their personal information were being rightfully used.
Prof. Cannataci
said this in an interview with the Ghanaian Times on the sidelines of
the opening of the first African Region Data Protection and Privacy
conference in Accra on Tuesday.
The four-day
conference, which is being attended by heads of data protection agencies
and experts from the African continent and beyond, was organised by the
DPC in partnership with the Network of African Data Protection
Authorities.
It was also to mark
an important milestone in the roadmap toward promoting the enactment of
data protection and privacy laws in Africa.
According to Prof.
Cannataci, it was laudable that the use of mobile phones to access the
internet was on the increase, making it easy for people to communicate
irrespective of distance, but it was important for them to know how data
was being used by both private and government agencies.
He urged Ghana to
align itself to standards such as Convention 108 which protects
individuals with regard to automatic processing of personal data and
protects their right to privacy, in view of the increasing flow across
frontiers of personal data currently available.
"I very much
encourage the government of Ghana to do like other African governments
like Morocco, Cape Verde and Senegal and join this international club
which makes you conversant with the most modern standards in privacy and
data protection," he added.
The UN Special
Rapporteur on Privacy said data protection and privacy in Africa was
growing but at a slow pace explaining that African countries were very
much into all forms of technology, but finding it very difficult to keep
with other European countries.
"It is not easy for
legislators to keep up with all the technologies but have to make
pragmatic efforts to ensure that they safeguard the information of their
citizens," he stated.
The Executive
Director of the DPC, Ms Patricia Adusei-Poku said the conference was to
find ways that Africa would rise to the challenge of data protection as a
fundamental human right.
She said the event
which started on Monday was to begin the discussion on how to enact more
data protection laws across the continent and also enforce a
standardised approach on the continent.
According to Ms
Adusei-Poku, protecting personal data was critical to fundamental human
rights, stressing that data in the wrong hands could cause serious harm
and damage.
She urged African
countries to pass the data protection laws in their countries to
safeguard the personal information of their citizens.
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