The Nigerian Senate has passed a
bill for the establishment of the Nationwide Emergency Communications Service,
just as it approved 112 as the toll-free number for emergencies.
Emergency Communication Service
is expected to involve deployment and coordination of a seamless and reliable
end-to-end infrastructure for emergency needs throughout Nigeria as being done
in the advanced world.
This was sequel to the
consideration of a report on the Nationwide Toll-Free Emergency Number
(Establishment) Bill, 2021, by the Committee on Communications, chaired by
Senator Oluremi Tinubu (APC Lagos Central) during Tuesday’s plenary.
The report was presented by
Senator Biodun Olujimi (PDP Ekiti South) on behalf of the committee chairman.
In her presentation, Senator
Olujimi explained that Clause 2 of the bill is for the establishment of the
Nationwide Emergency Communications Service.
According to the lawmaker, the
agency, when established, would be charged with the responsibility of
deployment and coordination of a seamless and reliable end-to-end
infrastructure for emergency needs throughout Nigeria.
She added that Clause 5 of the
bill was amended to vest the Nigeria Communications Commission (NCC) with the
responsibility of formulating regulations and guidelines for the workings of
the Nationwide Emergency Communications Service.
Olujimi explained that Clause 11
of the bill prohibits the use of telephone and mobile telecommunications
services to place a false, frivolous or vexatious call to the emergency number
112.
Clause 12 of the bill provides
that, “a person who violates any of the provisions of this bill or the
regulations is guilty of an offence and is liable on summary conviction to a
penalty of not more than fifty thousand naira or in default to a term
imprisonment not exceeding six months, and for each subsequent offence is
liable on summary conviction to a fine of not more than two hundred and fifty
thousand naira or, in default, to a term of imprisonment not exceeding one
year.”
In addition, new sub clauses (2),
(3) and (4) were introduced in the bill to provide for the blacklisting of any
person who violates Clause 11 for a period not more than eight weeks.
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