SIM card registration

Fake news




The ongoing countrywide registration of SIM cards has caused uproar and confusion among Kenyans, even as many rushed to beat the April 15 deadline set by the Communications Authority of Kenya (CA).

Mobile service provider Safaricom said that all subscribers will be required to register their identity details afresh and in person, even as Airtel and Telkom encouraged their customers to upload their details online.
However, CA, in a statement, said not everyone is required to register their details afresh, adding to the confusion facing subscribers.

“The major complaint we have had is the requirement of photos and everything. The regulations do not anticipate that we are going to take a photograph of you.
“And so if you are duly registered, then you do not need to go to your operator and service provider to get re-registered,” said CA director-general Ezra Chiloba, at the Kuza Awards held at a Nairobi hotel yesterday.

Frustrations
Many Kenyans yesterday turned to social media to express their frustrations, with some of the new requirements for registration, as others questioned the motive behind the directive, as well as its timing.
“Please, post here the exact instructions from CA so that we are sure you are not being overzealous about a very simple direction,” Kenya’s High Commissioner to the United Kingdom Manoah Esipisu posted on his Twitter handle, tagging Safaricom.
Mobile service providers continued to witness long queues as Kenyans lined up in different registration centres in the capital Nairobi and in other parts of the country to comply with the government directive.
Registration centres set up by mobile service providers in various parts of the city were, for the better part of yesterday, a hive of activity as mobile phone users rushed to update their details ahead of next week’s deadline.

But even as this happened, some questioned the timing of the directive, and the April 15 deadline, which they termed suspect, as well as the requirement that all users physically go to register their SIM cards.
Old habits
“Why are some service providers using the old ways of doing things? Provide us with links to update our SIM cards wherever we are. No time to come lining in your shops,” Mr Felix Tyson posed on twitter.
For some, the process had also become cumbersome and tiring, with some of those who had turned up to register within the central business district narrating their frustrations at queueing for long hours.
“I want to re-register my number because I don’t have the money to pay for the fine. It is better to do it now rather than incur unnecessary costs,” said Ms Charity Wangeci, as she waited to be served.
Safaricom, Airtel and even Telkom had in their communications to their customers asked them to turn up and register their SIM cards or risk being switched off after next week, a move they linked to a directive issued by CA.
Safaricom advised all its subscribers, including those using previously registered SIM cards, to re-register, insisting that while all SIM cards are registered on purchase, sometimes not all data was captured.
“This issue tends to affect some of the older customers on our networks. It is for this reason that the Communications Authority has asked us to invite all customers to submit their details as soon as possible,” Safaricom said in a statement, adding that it had committed to doing its best to ensure all its customers comply with the directive before the deadline.

Mr Chiloba said the current registration drive is part of the Registration of SIM Cards Regulations, 2015, which required all mobile service providers in the country to provide CA with an updated list of the details of their subscribers.
“The concerns raised by people on the process are legitimate, but we must be honest whether we understand what is at stake. Ensure that by 15 April 2022, your SIM card is duly registered,” said Mr Chiloba.
Mobile money fraud
Mr Chiloba also said the registration of SIM cards was still low, sometimes leading to crimes such as mobile money fraud, which could, otherwise, be easily avoided if all Kenyans followed the law.
He said that data from the CA indicated that at least 65 million SIM cards were in circulation, but a lesser number had been legally registered.
“We must ensure each subscriber is duly registered. We have about 65 million SIM cards active in Kenya. It means each person born in Kenya has a number attached to them. But we know the fact is most people have more than one SIM card,” Mr Chiloba said.
“Looking at the situation across the currently, the compliance levels on SIM card registration are not looking good. How do we know that you are duly registered? By dialing *106# you can know which numbers are registered in your name.”
 
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Nawaambia SIM card lazima you register mnadhani ni jokesView attachment 58815

So you say the Chiloba clarification contained here in below ni upuss was hali ya juu...



The ongoing countrywide registration of SIM cards has caused uproar and confusion among Kenyans, even as many rushed to beat the April 15 deadline set by the Communications Authority of Kenya (CA).

Mobile service provider Safaricom said that all subscribers will be required to register their identity details afresh and in person, even as Airtel and Telkom encouraged their customers to upload their details online.
However, CA, in a statement, said not everyone is required to register their details afresh, adding to the confusion facing subscribers.

“The major complaint we have had is the requirement of photos and everything. The regulations do not anticipate that we are going to take a photograph of you.
“And so if you are duly registered, then you do not need to go to your operator and service provider to get re-registered,” said CA director-general Ezra Chiloba, at the Kuza Awards held at a Nairobi hotel yesterday.

Frustrations
Many Kenyans yesterday turned to social media to express their frustrations, with some of the new requirements for registration, as others questioned the motive behind the directive, as well as its timing.
“Please, post here the exact instructions from CA so that we are sure you are not being overzealous about a very simple direction,” Kenya’s High Commissioner to the United Kingdom Manoah Esipisu posted on his Twitter handle, tagging Safaricom.
Mobile service providers continued to witness long queues as Kenyans lined up in different registration centres in the capital Nairobi and in other parts of the country to comply with the government directive.
Registration centres set up by mobile service providers in various parts of the city were, for the better part of yesterday, a hive of activity as mobile phone users rushed to update their details ahead of next week’s deadline.

But even as this happened, some questioned the timing of the directive, and the April 15 deadline, which they termed suspect, as well as the requirement that all users physically go to register their SIM cards.
Old habits
“Why are some service providers using the old ways of doing things? Provide us with links to update our SIM cards wherever we are. No time to come lining in your shops,” Mr Felix Tyson posed on twitter.
For some, the process had also become cumbersome and tiring, with some of those who had turned up to register within the central business district narrating their frustrations at queueing for long hours.
“I want to re-register my number because I don’t have the money to pay for the fine. It is better to do it now rather than incur unnecessary costs,” said Ms Charity Wangeci, as she waited to be served.
Safaricom, Airtel and even Telkom had in their communications to their customers asked them to turn up and register their SIM cards or risk being switched off after next week, a move they linked to a directive issued by CA.
Safaricom advised all its subscribers, including those using previously registered SIM cards, to re-register, insisting that while all SIM cards are registered on purchase, sometimes not all data was captured.
“This issue tends to affect some of the older customers on our networks. It is for this reason that the Communications Authority has asked us to invite all customers to submit their details as soon as possible,” Safaricom said in a statement, adding that it had committed to doing its best to ensure all its customers comply with the directive before the deadline.

Mr Chiloba said the current registration drive is part of the Registration of SIM Cards Regulations, 2015, which required all mobile service providers in the country to provide CA with an updated list of the details of their subscribers.
“The concerns raised by people on the process are legitimate, but we must be honest whether we understand what is at stake. Ensure that by 15 April 2022, your SIM card is duly registered,” said Mr Chiloba.
Mobile money fraud
Mr Chiloba also said the registration of SIM cards was still low, sometimes leading to crimes such as mobile money fraud, which could, otherwise, be easily avoided if all Kenyans followed the law.
He said that data from the CA indicated that at least 65 million SIM cards were in circulation, but a lesser number had been legally registered.
“We must ensure each subscriber is duly registered. We have about 65 million SIM cards active in Kenya. It means each person born in Kenya has a number attached to them. But we know the fact is most people have more than one SIM card,” Mr Chiloba said.
“Looking at the situation across the currently, the compliance levels on SIM card registration are not looking good. How do we know that you are duly registered? By dialing *106# you can know which numbers are registered in your name.”
 
The registration has been brought about by the fraud being practiced by some 'clever' fellows, they have been picking up lost and found ID cards, approaching jobless, desperate and vacuous dolts in slums, requesting for their ID cards with guile, promising them jobs and purchasing/registering lines with the intentions of conning and defrauding members of the public.
 
The registration has been brought about by the fraud being practiced by some 'clever' fellows, t

Not really the fraud has been brought about by the lax registration of new subscribers, if the law was passed in 2015, then, no lines should have been sold in the streets or given freely at bus stops since then. Service providers should have put checks just like banks, let all those new subscribers go into their centers for registration and activation of lines, even banks have agents all over but the responsibility of registering new clients lies with banks themselves, kina safaricom and the likes should have taken a similar approach. Sahi you can still pick a line from the vendors from the streets with fake ids yet they are claiming they want folks to register, it defeats the purpose of getting rid of fraudsters. That's why the greater public is jittery about this directive.
 
Not really the fraud has been brought about by the lax registration of new subscribers, if the law was passed in 2015, then, no lines should have been sold in the streets or given freely at bus stops since then. Service providers should have put checks just like banks, let all those new subscribers go into their centers for registration and activation of lines, even banks have agents all over but the responsibility of registering new clients lies with banks themselves, kina safaricom and the likes should have taken a similar approach. Sahi you can still pick a line from the vendors from the streets with fake ids yet they are claiming they want folks to register, it defeats the purpose of getting rid of fraudsters. That's why the greater public is jittery about this directive.
Basically the vendors drawn from the general public have the morals of an alley cat? Right? It's an indicator of endemic national lack of morals, what the late Ken Walibora(RIP two years down the line today) alluded as uozo wa jamii na ukosefu wa maadili by Kenyans which has pervaded the general Kenyan society.
 
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