Nigerian Communications Commission
The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) is the independent National Regulatory Authority responsible for overseeing Nigeria's communications industry, including telecommunications, broadcasting, and related ICT sectors.[1][2] Established under the Nigerian Communications Act of 2003, signed into law by President Olusegun Obasanjo on July 8, 2003, the NCC replaced earlier regulatory frameworks to liberalize a previously state-dominated sector, transitioning from monopoly control by the Nigerian Telecommunications Limited (NITEL) to a competitive market structure.[2][3] The Commission's core mandate encompasses facilitating private sector investments, protecting consumer interests through tariff oversight and service quality enforcement, promoting fair competition, allocating and managing radio frequency spectrum as a national resource, issuing and enforcing licenses, resolving industry disputes, and developing technical standards alongside universal service programs to bridge access gaps.[2][1] Under its regulation, Nigeria's telecom sector has expanded markedly since liberalization, achieving a teledensity exceeding 101% with over 219 million active voice and data subscriptions as of recent reports, alongside fixed and VoIP connections totaling more than 298,000 lines.[4] This growth has driven substantial economic contributions, with the sector generating N2.508 trillion in value added to GDP in the first quarter of 2023 alone, underscoring the NCC's role in fostering infrastructure deployment and ICT adoption for national development.[5] Notable achievements include spectrum auctions enabling 3G, 4G, and 5G rollouts, reductions in access disparities from 207 to 114 underserved clusters through targeted interventions, and international recognitions such as the 2019 Outstanding Regulator of the Year award and the 2018 African Organization of the Year honor, reflecting its influence in regional telecom governance.[6][7][8] However, the NCC has encountered controversies, including allegations of ethnic favoritism in staff promotions and hirings—such as a 2025 dispute involving promotions bypassing merit thresholds and a secretive recruitment of 17 employees disproportionately from northern regions—as well as criticisms over insufficient intervention in high tariffs and service quality lapses during market expansions.[9][10][11] These issues highlight ongoing challenges in internal governance and regulatory efficacy, though empirical sector metrics demonstrate net positive impacts from its competitive framework.[4][5]History
Establishment (1992)
The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) was established on November 24, 1992, through Decree No. 75 promulgated by the Federal Military Government under General Ibrahim Babangida.[12][13] This decree created the NCC as the primary regulatory body for the telecommunications sector, marking the initial step toward liberalizing Nigeria's previously monopolistic communications industry dominated by the Nigerian Telecommunications Limited (NITEL).[14][15] The decree's core objective was to foster an enabling environment for the provision of efficient, reliable, and affordable communications services, including licensing private operators and promoting competition to address chronic infrastructure deficits and service shortages.[12][16] At the time, Nigeria's telecom penetration was minimal, with fixed-line subscriptions below 1 per 100 inhabitants, prompting the shift from state monopoly to regulated private participation.[17] The NCC was empowered to oversee spectrum management, tariff regulation, and interconnection standards, though its early implementation was constrained by the military regime's priorities and limited funding.[18][19] The first NCC board was inaugurated in 1993, shortly after the decree's enactment, but operated for only one year amid political instability, including the annulment of the 1993 elections and subsequent regime change.[19][20] This brief initial phase laid groundwork for future reforms, with the commission focusing on preparatory regulatory frameworks rather than full-scale licensing, as Decree 75 was later repealed and superseded by the Nigerian Communications Act of 2003 to strengthen its autonomy and powers.[16][21]Legislative Framework and Evolution (2003 Onward)
The Nigerian Communications Act 2003 (NCA 2003), signed into law on July 8, 2003, by President Olusegun Obasanjo, established the primary legislative framework for the regulation of Nigeria's communications sector, repealing the prior Nigerian Communications Commission Decree No. 75 of 1992.[22][23] The Act delineates the NCC's mandate to promote fair competition, encourage investment in infrastructure, ensure universal service access, and maintain high-quality service standards, applying to all communications services and networks operating wholly or partially within Nigeria, including on registered ships or aircraft.[24] Key provisions empower the NCC to issue licenses, allocate spectrum, enforce technical standards, resolve disputes, and protect consumers, while prohibiting anti-competitive practices and mandating interconnection among operators.[25] Under the NCA 2003, the NCC has issued subsidiary regulations to adapt to sector developments, including amendments to the Communications Network Interconnection Regulations to facilitate operator agreements and dispute resolution.[26] In August 2024, the NCC introduced updated Business Rules and Regulations, requiring licensees to implement individual consumer codes, extend record retention periods to 24 months, and adhere to stricter quality-of-service metrics, such as faster complaint resolution timelines.[27] Additional guidelines have addressed type approval for equipment, emphasizing compliance with international standards to curb substandard imports and enhance network security.[28] These instruments, derived from the Act's rulemaking authority, have supported progressive liberalization, including the rollout of mobile number portability in 2013 and 5G spectrum auctions, without altering the core legislation.[25] By 2025, recognition of the NCA 2003's limitations in addressing emerging technologies like artificial intelligence, 5G deployment, and digital economy integration prompted calls for amendment.[29] In April 2025, the Nigerian House of Representatives and NCC initiated a comprehensive review to bridge regulatory gaps, eliminate overlaps with bodies like the National Broadcasting Commission, and incorporate provisions for data sovereignty and cybersecurity.[30] NCC Executive Vice Chairman Aminu Maida emphasized the Act's outdated nature amid rapid industry evolution, advocating updates to sustain growth and innovation.[31] As of October 2025, the review process remains ongoing, with no enacted amendments, preserving the 2003 framework as the foundational law alongside complementary statutes like the Wireless Telegraphy Act 1966 for spectrum enforcement.[32]Major Milestones in Telecom Liberalization
The establishment of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) in 1992 via Decree No. 75 marked the initial step toward telecom liberalization, transitioning Nigeria from a state monopoly under the Nigerian External Telecommunications (NET) and Nigerian Telecommunications Limited (NITEL) to a regulated framework allowing private sector participation in value-added services.[33] This partial deregulation aimed to address chronic underinvestment and low teledensity—fewer than 500,000 fixed lines for a population exceeding 100 million at the time—by introducing competition in non-core services while retaining public control over basic infrastructure.[34] Full liberalization accelerated with the National Telecommunications Policy announced on May 5, 2000, which outlined a blueprint for private entry into mobile and fixed-line services, ending NITEL's exclusivity and prioritizing digital mobile technologies like GSM over analog systems.[35] This policy directly facilitated the January 19, 2001, auction of four GSM licenses to private operators—MTN Nigeria, Econet Wireless (later rebranded as Vmobile and then Airtel), Mobile Telephone Networks (M-Tel, a NITEL subsidiary), and Globacom—ushering in rapid mobile penetration that grew from near-zero to over 10 million subscribers within three years.[36][37] The Nigerian Communications Act of 2003 further entrenched liberalization by repealing the 1992 decree, empowering the NCC with broader licensing, spectrum management, and enforcement powers to foster competition, while mandating interconnection between private networks and legacy state infrastructure.[38] This legislation attracted over $10 billion in foreign direct investment by 2005, primarily in mobile infrastructure, though challenges persisted, including NITEL's inefficient fixed-line backbone that private operators had to subsidize via asymmetric interconnection rates.[39] Subsequent milestones included the 2006 licensing of 22 fixed wireless operators and the 2013 spectrum auctions for 2G/3G expansion, which deepened market contestability but highlighted ongoing issues like multiple taxation hindering infrastructure rollout.Organizational Structure
Governing Body and Leadership
The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) is governed by a Board of Commissioners comprising nine members, including six non-executive commissioners representing Nigeria's six geopolitical zones, the Executive Vice Chairman/Chief Executive Officer (EVC/CEO), and two Executive Commissioners.[40] The Board holds ultimate responsibility for policy direction, oversight of the Commission's activities, and ensuring the execution of its regulatory mandate under the Nigerian Communications Act.[40] Members of the Board are appointed by the President of Nigeria for a five-year renewable term, subject to confirmation by the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.[40] This structure promotes regional representation and executive expertise, with the non-executive members providing independent oversight while the executive members handle operational leadership.[40] The EVC/CEO serves as the chief executive, directing day-to-day operations and reporting to the Board.[41] As of October 2025, Dr. Aminu Maida holds this position, having been appointed by President Bola Tinubu in 2023 and retained in subsequent board reconstitutions.[41] The two Executive Commissioners support the EVC: Engr. Sunday Abraham Oshadami oversees Technical Services, focusing on spectrum management and infrastructure standards, while Rimini Haraya Makama manages Stakeholder Management, handling consumer affairs and industry relations.[42][43] The Board Chairman, a non-executive role, leads meetings and represents the Commission in high-level engagements.[44] Idris Olorunnimbe was appointed to this position on August 12, 2025, by President Tinubu, with Senate confirmation requested shortly thereafter.[44][45] This leadership configuration has emphasized digital economy initiatives, including 5G rollout and broadband expansion, amid ongoing sector challenges.[40]Departments and Operational Framework
The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) operates under a hierarchical structure governed by a Board of Commissioners, with the Executive Vice Chairman (EVC) serving as the Chief Executive Officer responsible for overall operations and directly supervising 12 departments.[46] Two Executive Commissioners—one for Technical Services (ECTS) and one for Stakeholder Management (ECSM)—oversee specialized functions, with the ECTS managing 6 departments focused on technical regulation and the ECSM handling 5 departments addressing industry stakeholders and consumers, for a total of 23 departments across the organization.[46] This structure supports the NCC's mandate under the Nigerian Communications Act 2003 to regulate telecommunications through specialized units, ensuring separation of technical, stakeholder, and administrative roles to promote efficiency and impartiality.[46] Key departments under the EVC include Finance, which manages treasury, budgeting, and accounting; Corporate Planning and Strategy, responsible for performance monitoring and policy review; Human Capital and Infrastructure, covering recruitment, administration, and procurement; Internal Audit; Commission Secretariat; and Public Affairs, which handles communications and stakeholder engagement.[47] Departments under the ECTS encompass Spectrum Administration for planning, assignment, and monitoring of radio frequencies; Technical Standards and Network Integrity for wireless, fixed networks, and quality of service; and others such as Cybersecurity, New Technology Assessment, and Internet Governance to address emerging technologies and security.[47] The ECSM supervises units like Legal and Regulatory Services for licensing and disputes; Compliance Monitoring and Enforcement for reporting and sanctions; and Consumer Affairs for policy development and protection.[46] [47] The operational framework emphasizes functional specialization and accountability, with departments divided into directorates and units to handle core regulatory tasks such as spectrum allocation, enforcement, and consumer dispute resolution.[46] Zonal offices in Lagos, Ibadan, Port Harcourt, Enugu, and Kano facilitate regional implementation, enabling localized monitoring and enforcement while central departments coordinate national policy.[47] This setup allows the NCC to adapt to sector growth, as evidenced by periodic updates to the organogram, such as expansions in cybersecurity and digital innovation units to address evolving threats and technologies.[47] The framework prioritizes independence from operators, with internal audits and compliance mechanisms ensuring transparency in decision-making.[46]| Executive Oversight | Sample Departments and Focus Areas |
|---|---|
| EVC (12 departments) | Finance (budgeting, accounting); Corporate Planning (strategy, projects); Human Capital (recruitment, admin); Public Affairs (communications)[47] |
| ECTS (6 departments) | Spectrum Administration (frequency management); Technical Standards (network integrity, QoS); Cybersecurity (threat mitigation)[47] |
| ECSM (5 departments) | Legal Services (licensing, disputes); Compliance Enforcement (monitoring, sanctions); Consumer Affairs (protection, policy)[46] |
Core Functions and Responsibilities
Licensing and Spectrum Allocation
The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), established under the Nigerian Communications Act of 2003, is responsible for issuing licenses to telecommunications operators and service providers to ensure orderly market entry and compliance with regulatory standards.[48] Licenses are categorized into individual licenses, which grant specific rights and obligations to a particular undertaking for activities like operating national carrier services or unified access services, and class licenses, which allow any qualified person to provide specified services such as value-added or internet services without individual approval.[49] Examples of individual licenses include the Unified Access Service Licence (UASL) for providing fixed, mobile, or combined voice and data services, and mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) licenses for reselling services without owning infrastructure.[50] The licensing application process requires applicants to be registered corporate entities meeting technical, financial, and operational criteria, including submission of a business plan, proof of capital (e.g., minimum equity for certain licenses), and a non-refundable application fee starting from NGN 500,000.[51] Applications are submitted via the NCC's eServices portal at eservices.ncc.gov.ng, where forms are filled, documents uploaded (such as tax clearance and network breakdown), and reviewed for compliance before approval or rejection within specified timelines.[48] License durations vary, typically 5–15 years, with renewal subject to performance audits and fees; failure to comply can result in suspension or revocation.[52] Spectrum allocation, integral to licensing, is managed by the NCC to assign radio frequencies for telecommunications use, guided by the National Frequency Table aligned with International Telecommunication Union (ITU) Region 1 allocations covering 8.3 kHz to 300 GHz.[53] The NCC's Frequency Management Policy emphasizes efficient, equitable assignment through transparent methods like auctions for high-demand bands (e.g., 3G at 450 MHz) or administrative allocation, with primary services prioritized over secondary to minimize interference and promote refarming for emerging technologies.[54] Spectrum pricing follows the Frequency Spectrum Fees and Pricing Regulations, varying by band, bandwidth, region (state-level or national), and duration, with fees calculated to recover costs while avoiding speculative hoarding; for instance, licenses correspond to Nigeria's 36 states and Federal Capital Territory.[55] In practice, spectrum assignments are tied to license approvals, requiring operators to specify frequency needs in applications, undergo type approval for equipment, and adhere to utilization plans to prevent underuse.[54] The NCC enforces compliance via monitoring, with penalties for interference, and has pursued spectrum optimization, including consultations on bands like 5925–6425 MHz for operational licenses as of September 2025.[56] A forthcoming five-year national spectrum roadmap, set for unveiling in November 2025, aims to enhance allocation efficiency, broadband expansion, and alignment with global standards amid growing demand.[57]Regulatory Enforcement and Standards Setting
The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) enforces telecommunications regulations through its Compliance Monitoring and Enforcement Department, which conducts audits, investigations, and imposes penalties such as fines and sanctions for violations including non-compliance with licensing, quality of service benchmarks, and fraudulent practices.[58] Under the Nigerian Communications Act 2003, the NCC is authorized to monitor operator adherence, issue pre-enforcement notices, and pursue prosecutions where necessary, with recent efforts emphasizing stricter measures against issues like call masking, SIM boxing, and unauthorized equipment use.[25][59][60] In standards setting, the NCC establishes minimum technical and performance benchmarks to ensure network interoperability, equipment safety, and service reliability, including guidelines on interconnectivity that mandate operable interfaces without converting private carriers into common ones.[61] Key frameworks include the Quality of Service (QoS) Regulations 2024, which define thresholds for call setup success rates, data throughput, and service availability across 2G, 3G, and 4G networks, with quarterly measurements and penalties for sustained underperformance below 90-95% compliance in metrics like voice drop rates.[62][63][64] The Type Approval Regulations 2024 further require telecommunications equipment to meet specified interoperability and safety standards before market entry, streamlining certification while prohibiting non-compliant imports.[28][65] Enforcement actions have included significant fines, such as the N275 billion penalty paid by MTN Nigeria in 2015-2016 for SIM registration infractions, resolved through negotiated installments.[66] In 2020, Globacom was fined N2 million for violating promotional advertising bans, while audits revealed persistent issues like inadequate Do Not Disturb (DND) implementation across operators.[67] Physical enforcements targeted defaulters like Phase 3 Telecoms and Radial Circle Telecommunications in 2021 for payment defaults, alongside pre-enforcement notices against unauthorized GSM boosters.[68][69] By 2024-2025, the NCC shifted toward proactive compliance via business rules under QoS guidelines, imposing escalating fines—starting at N500,000 daily for minor breaches—while prioritizing remediation over pure penalties to curb fraud and improve sector accountability.[70][60]Consumer Protection and Dispute Resolution
The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) oversees consumer protection in the telecommunications sector through its Consumer Affairs Bureau (CAB), established to safeguard the rights, privileges, and interests of telecom consumers against unfair practices by licensees.[71] The CAB monitors service providers' customer care activities, produces periodic reports on complaint trends, and enforces compliance with quality of service standards mandated under Chapter VII of the Nigerian Communications Act 2003, which requires operators to maintain minimum performance levels for network reliability, billing accuracy, and service delivery.[72] [18] These protections extend to prohibiting arbitrary disconnections, ensuring transparent tariff disclosures, and promoting fair billing, with the NCC empowered to impose penalties for violations.[73] Dispute resolution mechanisms prioritize internal operator handling before escalation to the NCC, as outlined in the Commission's guidelines and the Consumer Code of Practice Regulations 2024, which require licensees to resolve complaints within specified timelines—typically 30 days for standard issues and shorter for urgent matters like service outages.[74] Consumers can lodge complaints via NCC's toll-free lines, online portals, or outsourced contact centers for issues such as doubtful bills, poor network quality, or unauthorized charges, triggering a multi-tier process: initial operator response, NCC mediation if unresolved, and potential arbitration.[73] For small claims not exceeding N1,000,000 (with drafts proposing up to N10,000,000 in 2024 guidelines), the NCC provides an informal, inexpensive procedure emphasizing alternative dispute resolution (ADR) to avoid litigation, including consumer forums and expert determinations.[75] [76] Parties bear their own costs in these proceedings, promoting efficiency while upholding procedural fairness.[74] The framework derives statutory authority from sections 104-106 of the NCC Act, which mandate dispute resolution and a national Consumer Code to standardize protections across operators.[18] In practice, the CAB analyzes complaints for patterns, forwarding unresolved cases for enforcement, with arbitration available post-exhaustion of operator mechanisms; dissatisfied parties may seek judicial review, though the process aims to minimize such escalations.[73] Recent updates, including 2024 draft guidelines, enhance transparency by requiring detailed complaint logging and resolution tracking, addressing prior inefficiencies in handling high-volume disputes amid sector growth.[77] Despite these structures, resolution efficacy varies, with data indicating faster handling for billing errors compared to infrastructure-related grievances.[78]Achievements and Economic Impact
Contributions to GDP and Sector Expansion
The telecommunications sector regulated by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has emerged as a major driver of Nigeria's economy, with its contributions to gross domestic product (GDP) reflecting effective regulatory frameworks post-2003 liberalization. In the first quarter of 2023, the sector directly added N2.508 trillion to GDP, underscoring its role in fostering revenue generation through mobile services, data usage, and ancillary economic activities.[5] By 2022, the aggregate contribution from telecommunications and information services reached N10.126 trillion, positioning it as one of the fastest-growing non-oil sectors.[79] The sector's GDP share has shown volatility amid macroeconomic pressures but consistently exceeded 13% in recent years, with telecommunications alone accounting for 16.36% in the second quarter of 2024—the highest in five years—driven by subscriber growth and digital service adoption.[80] Broader information and communications technology (ICT) metrics, including telecom, reached 19.78% of real GDP in Q2 2024 and 17.68% in Q4 2024, per National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) data, highlighting NCC's spectrum allocation and licensing as enablers of this expansion despite challenges like foreign investment declines.[81][82] NCC's regulatory measures have propelled sector expansion, evidenced by active voice subscriptions surpassing 171.6 million by August 2025—a 1.3% rise from the prior month—and broadband penetration climbing to 48.81%, up from 45% a year earlier.[83][84] This growth, from 223.6 million total lines in April 2023 (with teledensity at 117%), has been facilitated by NCC's enforcement of competition and infrastructure investments, though active lines stabilized around 169-171 million amid churn.[5] The market, valued at $9.4 billion in 2024, is projected to reach $15.7 billion by 2032 at a 6.6% CAGR, with dominant operators like MTN and Airtel controlling 86% of subscriptions, amplifying economic multipliers in employment and ancillary services.[85][86]Facilitation of Technological Infrastructure
The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has facilitated technological infrastructure development primarily through regulatory frameworks, licensing incentives, and the administration of the Universal Service Provision Fund (USPF), which subsidizes deployments in underserved areas.[87][88] Established under the Nigerian Communications Act of 2003, the USPF allocates 2.5% of telecom operators' annual profits to fund projects like the Rural Broadband Initiative (RUBI) and Accelerated Mobile Phone Expansion (AMPE), underwriting costs for base stations and fiber-optic cables in unserved communities.[87][84] By 2022, these efforts targeted 97 clusters of underserved areas, bridging connectivity gaps that market forces alone had not addressed.[89] NCC's licensing of Infrastructure Companies (InfraCos) has driven fiber-optic rollout, with guidelines enabling operators to deploy nationwide backhaul networks.[90] This framework supports the National Broadband Plan's goal of expanding fiber capacity from 35,000 km in 2024 to 125,000 km, positioning Nigeria as Africa's third-largest terrestrial fiber network.[91] Stakeholder engagements, such as zonal broadband deployment forums, have reduced barriers like right-of-way charges, encouraging private investment; telecom sector inflows exceeded $1 billion following tariff adjustments in 2025.[92][93] These measures contributed to broadband penetration reaching 48.81% by August 2025, providing internet access to over 140 million Nigerians.[94] Collaborations with entities like the Rural Electrification Agency have integrated renewable energy into telecom sites, enhancing infrastructure resilience in off-grid areas.[95] NCC's enforcement of infrastructure sharing guidelines among operators has minimized redundant builds, optimizing spectrum and capital for 4G/5G expansions, with projections for an additional $150 million in mobile investments from policy reforms.[96] Despite vandalism challenges, these initiatives have sustained sector growth, though full realization depends on sustained funding and protection mechanisms.[97]Criticisms and Controversies
Regulatory Burdens and Inefficiencies
The Nigerian Communications Commission's regulatory framework has imposed significant compliance costs on telecom operators, including annual operating levies set at 2.5% of net revenues for network operators and 1% of gross revenues for non-network operators, which contribute to elevated operational expenses amid a capital-intensive sector.[98] High spectrum licensing fees, such as the $273.6 million per slot for 5G auctions in 2021, have deterred smaller operators from participating, limiting market competition and delaying network expansions due to financial strain on incumbents.[99] These costs, compounded by bureaucratic licensing processes that can extend up to 12 months, hinder timely infrastructure deployment and exacerbate inefficiencies in service rollout.[99] Overlapping regulations from multiple government agencies create additional burdens, with telecom firms facing over 39 distinct levies and fees at federal, state, and local levels, including arbitrary increases like aviation height clearance certifications that surged 1,000-4,000% in 2005 and state-imposed environmental fees lacking federal legal basis, such as Imo State's N30,000 per site charge.[100][99] Coercive enforcement actions, including site closures by state agencies rejecting federal approvals, disrupt maintenance on hub sites serving 20-100 connected locations, leading to widespread network outages that degrade service quality and economic productivity.[100] For internet service providers (ISPs), high NCC licensing fees and renewal requirements have reduced active licensees from over 170 to 143 by October 2020, fostering inefficiencies through low survivability rates and stifled broadband expansion, with only 54,000 km of fiber deployed against a needed 120,000 km.[101] Right-of-way charges, varying by state up to ₦6,500 per meter, further inflate deployment costs under NCC oversight, while fragmented policies delay approvals and fragment infrastructure investment.[99] These inefficiencies have prompted operator demands for tariff adjustments, culminating in NCC's approval of a 50% hike in early 2025 to offset rising costs, though this has drawn criticism for burdening consumers without fully resolving underlying regulatory overlaps.[102] The combined effect reduces incentives for innovation and capital inflows, as evidenced by stalled 5G progress following failed auctions attributed to prohibitive pricing and procedural delays.[103]Enforcement Challenges and Alleged Corruption
The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has encountered significant enforcement challenges in regulating telecom operators, including reluctance to impose fines despite a stated zero-tolerance policy for non-compliance, preferring collaborative support over punitive measures.[104] External barriers exacerbate these issues, such as right-of-way (RoW) denials by state governments, which hinder infrastructure deployment; between January and August 2025, Nigeria recorded 19,384 fibre cuts and 3,241 equipment thefts linked to vandalism and access restrictions.[105] Multiple taxation across federal, state, and local levels further burdens operators, stifling sector growth and complicating NCC's ability to enforce quality-of-service standards and compliance.[106] Allegations of internal corruption have also undermined enforcement credibility. In a 2020 internal probe, NCC officials Yakubu Gontor (Head of Finance) and Philip Eretan (former Head of Internal Audit) were indicted for fraudulently claiming N122 million (N54 million for Gontor and N68 million for Eretan) in allowances for unmade trips, with recommendations for prosecution and discipline issued but not implemented; salary deductions occurred, yet neither the NCC nor Communications Minister Isa Pantami enforced anti-corruption laws by April 2021.[107] More recently, in May 2025, NCC staff alleged fraud and ethnic bias in a promotion exercise affecting 239 employees effective January 1, 2025, claiming score manipulation, unapproved raising of the pass mark from 60% to 70%, favoritism toward those with elite foreign training, and exclusion of Southeast candidates from key advancements; affected staff threatened Industrial Court action and demanded Executive Vice Chairman Aminu Maida's removal.[108] These claims, disputed by supporters of Maida who urged petitions to anti-corruption agencies for evidence, highlight ongoing tensions over merit-based processes amid calls for presidential intervention.[9] No convictions have resulted from these cases, reflecting persistent gaps in accountability.Service Quality and Infrastructure Issues (2020-2025)
During the period from 2020 to 2025, the Nigerian telecommunications sector under the oversight of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) grappled with persistent service quality deficiencies, including high rates of dropped calls, incomplete call setups, and unreliable broadband connectivity, particularly in urban centers like Lagos and Abuja. These issues stemmed from inadequate network capacity relative to surging demand, exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic's acceleration of data usage for remote work and digital services. NCC's quarterly Quality of Service (QoS) measurements revealed that major operators such as MTN and Airtel frequently fell short of benchmarks for call drop rates and data throughput, with poor service quality cited as a primary cause of network congestion.[109][110][63] Infrastructure vulnerabilities compounded these service lapses, with fibre optic cable cuts accounting for 51.7% of mobile network outages between April and July 2025, followed by power supply failures at 28.1%. Nationwide, the sector recorded over 40,000 disruptions in the first eight months of 2025 alone, driven by vandalism, excavation damages, and unreliable electricity, which hindered base station operations and backhaul connectivity. Rural-urban disparities persisted, leaving approximately 130 million Nigerians without mobile internet access as of October 2025, despite broadband penetration reaching 48.81% overall, far below the NCC's 70% year-end target. Last-mile infrastructure deficits forced heavy reliance on mobile networks, resulting in slower speeds and elevated costs compared to fixed broadband alternatives.[111][112][113] The NCC responded with regulatory measures, including the 2024 QoS Regulations that imposed stricter key performance indicators (KPIs) for 2G, 3G, and 4G networks—such as maximum drop call rates of 2% and call setup success rates above 95%—along with mandatory monthly reporting and fines for non-compliance. In May 2025, the NCC directed operators to notify consumers of outages via public channels, aiming to enhance transparency. However, enforcement challenges persisted, as multiple taxation, right-of-way delays, and insufficient investment—requiring a doubling from $68 billion to $136 billion for adequate expansion—limited infrastructure upgrades. Critics, including industry stakeholders, argued that these issues reflected regulatory inefficiencies, with tariff hikes approved by the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) in early 2025 conditioned on unverified service improvements that remained elusive.[114][115][116]| Issue Category | Key Metrics (2020-2025) | Primary Causes |
|---|---|---|
| Network Outages | >40,000 disruptions (Jan-Aug 2025); >30 in May 2025 alone | Fibre cuts (51.7%), power failures (28.1%), vandalism[112][113][111] |
| Broadband Access | 48.81% penetration (Aug 2025); 130 million without mobile internet | Last-mile gaps, urban bias in deployment[94][117][118] |
| QoS Failures | Elevated drop rates, low throughput in major cities | Capacity overload, infrastructure sabotage[109][110] |