The House of Representatives has proposed heavy penalties for
“Computer misuse and Cybercrimes,” with fines ranging from N5m to N25m
for offenders.
Convicted persons will also serve jail terms ranging from two to 15 years.
Cybercrime is commonly known as Yahoo Yahoo in Nigeria.
The
penalties are contained in amendments proposed to the Criminal Code and
the Penal Code. The two bills have already passed second reading at the
House and are scheduled for public hearing by the House Committee on
Justice headed by Mr. Ali Ahmad.
For the Criminal Code, the amendment seeks to insert a new Chapter 56, dedicated to “Computer Misuse and Cybercrime Offences.”
Section
3 (1) provides that it is an offence to gain access to a computer
system or network without authorisation. Offenders are “liable on
conviction to a fine of not more than N10m or imprisonment for a term of
five years or both.”
The fine can be up to N20m or 10-year
imprisonment or both if the offence is “committed with the intent of
obtaining computer data, securing access to any program, commercial or
industrial secrets or confidential information.”
The section
gives further explanations, “Any person, who commits an offence under
this section, uses any device to avoid detection or otherwise prevent
identification with the act or omission, commits an offence or
facilitates the commission of such offence and is liable on conviction
to a fine of not more than N20m or imprisonment of 10 years or to both.”
The
amendment proposes a penalty of N15m or a prison term of eight years or
both for any “unauthorised modification” of a computer program or data
held in any computer or network.
Under Section 8 of the
provisions, any act, deliberately intended to make a computer system or
network to malfunction for criminal gains, is punishable with a fine of
N15m or a jail term of 10 years.
The disclosure of password or
access code to any computer or network without authorisation carries a
jail term of two years or a fine of N5m or both.
However, the
jail term can be as high as 15 years or a fine of N25m or both if the
act results to a “substantial loss or damage.”
The proposals, which were obtained by Saturday PUNCH in
Abuja, also provided various penalties for “identify theft and
impersonation, child pornography and related Offences, cyber squatting,
cyber terrorism, racist and xenophobic offences, interception of
electronic communication, cyber stalking and cyber harassment.”
Cyber criminals are said to get away easily in Nigeria due to weak legal provisions to punish them.
Security
agencies and anti-graft bodies like the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission have frequently called for stiffer legal provisions to
address the problem.
The two amendments were proposed by a member, Aisha Daniru-Ahmed.
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