Kamau Muthoni
Safaricom had raised concerns about mobile phone users’ privacy after
the Communication Authority (CA) informed the telco it would install a
Device Management System (DMS) and synchronise it
with their network.
The objections about the controversial system were contained in
exchanges between Safaricom’s former CEO Bob Collymore and the
authority.
CA wrote to Safaricom, Airtel and Telkom on October 10, 2016 notifying
them that it intended to install the system, the reason being combating
the proliferation of counterfeit mobile phones and international calls
which were masked as local calls, and which denied the telcos revenue
SEE ALSO: State gets greenlight to tap private phone calls
In court, Airtel and Telkom opted to keep off the fight, saying they would abide with whatever the court decided.
Former CA Director-General Francis Wangusi, in his replying affidavit to
the case filed in the High Court by activist Okiya Omtatah, told the
court that each of the Mobile Network Operators (MNOs) have their DSMs,
but the government needed a centralised system.
Safaricom said CA never convened any meeting to discuss the design or
rules to run the system, only opting to communicate the specifications
and the design in a letter dated October 10, 2016.
Consumer privacy
Seven days later on October 17, 2016, Collymore responded saying the
system raised key concerns, among them privacy and confidentiality of
consumer information as CA had hired a third-party — Broadband
Communication Networks Limited (BCNL) which was partnering with Invigo
Off-Shore Sal, a Lebanon based firm — to run the system for Sh187
million.
Safaricom’s then head of Regulatory and Public Policy in the Corporate
Affairs Division Mercy Ndegwa, in her affidavit, told the court that CA
held only one technical committee meeting on November 23, 2016 at which
the firms raised concerns of consumers privacy.
Court record reads that two months later on January 31, 2017, CA wrote
to them stating that it had commenced the DMS project and integration
and it needed them to grant Broadband BCNL access to their sites for
installation. “We are in the advanced stages of setting up the
connectivity links between DMS and your network.
The purpose of the
visit is to survey and discuss with your technical team the integration
of the DMS and your network. The key highlights of the visit will be on
the following matters,” the letter by CA and quoted in the High Court
case read.
They were to discuss the architecture of connectivity between
the DMS and the telcos system to access information on the IMEI, IMSI,
MSISDN, and CDRs of subscribers.
IMEI is a unique number that identifies your mobile phone, International
Mobile Subscriber Identity (IMSI) is a number which uniquely identifies
every user of a cellular network.
Mobile Station Integrated Subscriber
Directory Number (MSISDN) is your mobile number. Meanwhile, CDRs (Call
Data Records) are records containing details of a telephone call or
other transactions. They include your location, time, duration, the
receiver and whether the call was connected.
According to Ndegwa, the sole concern was whether BCNL would have
unfettered access to the consumers’ call data records, location
information, credit card and M-Pesa information, identification
information and SMS information, which equates to all the records of any
consumer with a registered mobile device. She says the authority never
addressed the concerns and Safaricom concluded that subscribers were at
risk of having their details, telecommunications, short message
services, social media messaging and data exchanges being interfered
with by installation of the device.
CA denied DMS would give automatic access to consumers’ information.
However, Safaricom’s lawyer told the High Court that besides BCNL, the
National Police Service, the Anti-Counterfeit Agency, and Kenya Bureau
Standard (Kebs) will also have access to the DMS system, hence
escalating concerns of listening, tapping, surveillance and storage of
communications and related data.
Strong argument
The Coalition for Reforms and Democracy (CORD) also supported the case
arguing that surveillance and intercepting calls violates the right to
privacy. While agreeing with Omtatah, Safaricom and CORD, Justice John
Mativo found that CA did not give a convincing argument that would water
down the argument on its capability to snoop into peoples’ private
mobile lives.
“Subscribers data held by the first to the third interested parties can
only be released under the circumstances permitted by the law, and in
particular Section 27A of KICA. There is no argument before me to
demonstrate that the DMS fits any of the circumstances contemplated
under the said section.
Nor is there a strong argument by CA rebutting
the position taken by the petitioner and Safaricom on the capabilities
of the DMS,” he ruled. “In any event the letter dated January 31, 2017
which triggered this petition stated in clear terms that the DMS was
meant to “...access information on the IMEI, IMSI, MSISDN, and CDRs of
the subscribers on your network.”
He also found that CA ought to have conducted meaningful consultations
and public participation to come up with regulations to run the system.
In the end, the judge barred CA from continuing with the project, noting
that the work that CA wanted to do could also be done by Kenya Revenue
Authority, the police, Kebs and even the telcos as they had a system of
identifying unregistered sim cards and mobile phones. He noted that more
than 1.89 million mobile phones had been successfully blocked with the
help of the mobile phone services firms.
“An order of prohibition be and is hereby issued prohibiting the first
respondent (CA), its servant or agents from implementing its decision to
implement the DMS system to establish connectivity between the DMS and
the first, second and third interested parties system to access
information on the IMEI, IMSI, MSISDN and CDRs of their subscribers on
their network,” Mativo ruled.
Aggrieved, CA moved to the Appeals court and that court overturned
Justice Mativo’s verdict.
Here, CA’s lawyer Wambua Kilonzo argued that
the case was premature as DMS was at the design stage.
It claimed that although the device had been procured, the methodology
of its use and interaction with other MNOs was still under discussion.
The court heard nothing was produced on its alleged spy capabilities.
According to CA’s lawyer, DMS is not a new system but a continued
upgrade to control or stop the proliferation of illegal devices. BCNL
supported CA’s case, arguing that the source of fear claims emanated
from stories published by The Standard and Daily Nation.
The Standard ran a story headlined ‘Big brother could start tapping your
calls from next week’ while Daily Nation published a story ‘Bold plan
to spy on calls, texts rolled out from Tuesday next week.’
Safaricom, which was the seventh respondent through its lawyer Nani
Mungai, urged Justices William Ouko, Martha Koome and Daniel Musinga to
dismiss the case.
Nani told the three judges that the key criteria of the system in the
tender was for it to have the ability to track the location of the
mobile device, access to various sensitive components and records of
customer devices at any time, which include call data records (CDRs),
billing systems and home location registers and records of MNOs.
Kenya Human Rights Commission (KHRC) also urged the court to dismiss the
case, reiterating that the system was likely to spy onprivate
communication. KHRC argued that other agencies, like anti-counterfeit
agency and police, would equally weed out stolen and counterfeit phones.
While reversing the orders by the High Court, Justices Ouko, Koome and
Musinga faulted Justice Mativo, saying he ought to have considered that
those dealing with counterfeit and stolen phones had gone a gear further
to clone genuine IMEIs. They said the judge had over dwelt on
interpreting ‘access’ but failed to consider the challenges raised by
CA.
Term ‘access’
“The judge went into so much interpretation of the general human rights
protection but did not give similar regard and attention to the
challenges that needed to be addressed with solutions.
We think the
judge over concentrated only on the interpretation of an aspect of the
term ‘access’ in a narrow sense in regard to retrieving data, which he
took to mean intrusion of privacy to communication,” they ruled in a
judgement read by Justice Koome.
“He, however, did not consider other aspects of ‘access’ such as making
use of the resources to address the challenges at hand.
We state this
cautiously, noting that in accessing the data there was fear that the
right to privacy was likely to be infringed, which seems to have
preoccupied the judge,” they ruled.
Although Safaricom had raised concerns about spying, the three judges
found that there was no evidence that DMS was going to intrude private
communication other than ‘newspaper cuttings.’
The court noted the headlines were sensationalised and their authors
ought to have been examined in court if they were to be admitted as
evidence.
They said CA would have addressed Safaricom’s contention were it not for
the High Court issuing orders which halted the project. They set aside
the orders paving the way for CA to continue with the system, but with
consultations with stakeholders and mobile network operators.
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