The Nigeria
Communications Commission (NCC) is set to harmonise all short codes and USSD in
use in Nigerian telecommunication industry. The plan for the
harmonisation was
recently unveiled to stakeholders in the industry at a stakeholder’s forum
organised by the NCC at the Digital Bridge Institute, Lagos.
The meeting
drew stakeholders in the industry from far and wide, who were sensitised on the
objective and importance of the harmonisation of short codes and on the
proposed migration plan.
Speaking at
the event, Chief Executive Officer of Molcom Multi-Concepts Limited-The Project
Consultants carrying out the Short Code Harmonization, Engr. Paul Dinwoke
informed the stakeholders comprising executives from the Mobile Network
Operators, MNOs, Bank Executives, Representatives from CBN, Value Added Service
(VAS) Licensees and Executives of the Wireless Application Services Providers
in Nigeria, (WASPAN) that the aim of harmonization was to bring sanity into the
licensing and utilisation of short codes in Nigeria which presently needs
proper alignment with the requirements of International Telecommunication
Union(ITU) and International best practices.
He revealed
that at the end of the exercise, short codes will be properly categorised and
placed in bands, according to services and sectors and that a more robust short
code policy will be drafted for the Nigerian telecommunications industry.
Also speaking,
Head Fixed Networks and Converged Services in the Nigerian Communications
Commission, Engr. Anthony Ikemefuna, told the stakeholders that the commission
was convening the forum to garner stakeholders’ buy-in in the whole short code
harmonisation process as traditional with the practice in the commission to
always carry stakeholders along in their activities.
He disclosed
to stakeholders that at the end of the project, some short codes would be
withdrawn and re-allocated or reserved, while common short code allocations for
a specific service will now be the same across networks as against the present
situation where different short codes are provided by different network by the
same licensee for the same service.
He also
revealed that most likely after the exercise, common short codes used by
network operators for services such as phone recharge, data services, call
centers and others will be uniform across all networks to improve customer
experience.During the event stakeholders were allowed to discuss the inputs
from questionnaires sent to them by the commission about the exercise and
contribute generally on the plan.
Mr. Edoyemi
Ogoh, Assistant Director, Technical Standard and Network Integration (NCC)
answered various questions from stakeholders and assuaged most of the concerns
about the harmonisation plan. There were mixed reactions from stakeholders as
most licensees claimed not to have received the questionnaire prior to the
summit.
However,
representatives from the banks appealed that they be left with their present
short codes since they have spent a lot of funds in awareness. Most of the
licensees sought for more time beyond one year before migrating to the new
harmonised short codes. The Director Licensing and Authorization of the NCC, Ms.
Funlola Akiode urged licensees to always update their contact details with the
commission anytime there are changes in their organisations as the commission
reaches out to licensees frequently to carry them along in NCC’s programmes,
stating that failure to update such information amounts to violation of the
terms of their licenses.
A period of
two more weeks was therefore granted as extension for licensees to respond to
the questionnaires to avoid any stakeholder from being alienated in the short
code harmonisation process. The event came to a close with a speech from the
Executive Commissioner Stakeholders Management, Mr. Sunday Dare, who thanked
all attendees to the stakeholders’ forum and the project consultants for a
fantastic job. He re-iterated the commission’s resolve to embark on more
innovative projects like the short code harmonisation to improve and position
the telecommunication industry to meet the dynamics of the rapidly changing
Information and Communication Technology landscape globally. He told the
audience to expect more of similar industry repositioning projects. He urged
stakeholders to do well to respond to the questionnaires within the two weeks
timeline so that the project can be concluded in good time.
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