Key Points
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The identity threats in Nigeria are accelerating amid cyberattacks.
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Student body says the identity threats in Nigeria expose institutional weakness.
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Nigeria must bolster governance and security to contain identity threats in Nigeria.
Fraud and cyberattacks are on the rise in Nigeria, which puts citizens’ data and institutional trust at risk. This is a serious threat to the country’s digital integrity. The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) has said that identity theft and online scams are now making the systems that were meant to modernise public services and financial transactions less effective.
Comrade Akinteye Babatunde, NANS’s National Director for ICT and Cyber Affairs, said in Abuja that Nigeria’s growing reliance on online platforms has made it more vulnerable. He said, “Digital growth without data protection is like building a city without walls.”
Cyberattacks show how weak national identity systems are
According to a report by the Punch news, Dr. Obadare Peter Adewale, Nigeria’s first Professor of Cybersecurity Practice and Co-founder of Digital Encode, says that the rise in online fraud targeting Nigerians shows that the country’s infrastructure is very weak. He said that most identity management and banking systems still use old ways to check who you are.
“Fraudsters take advantage of weak authentication and poor communication between agencies,” Adewale said. “It’s not just about money; it’s about national security.”
After reports of unauthorised access to data, Nigeria’s National Identity Management Commission (NIMC), which is in charge of the National Identification Number (NIN) database, has come under fire. Vincent Olatunji, the National Commissioner of the Nigeria Data Protection Commission (NDPC), said that cybercriminals are more and more going after public databases. He called for “stronger enforcement of data privacy laws and staff accountability.”
Fraud and cybercrime are making identity theft more common in Nigeria
More and more people are stealing identities, from fake academic certificates to impersonation scams. This is making people less trusting of digital governance. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Department of State Services (DSS) are looking into networks that are thought to be selling people’s personal information online.
Dr. Chisom Elizabeth Alozie, a cybersecurity consultant in the UK and the founder of CyberGuard360, said that Nigeria’s identity infrastructure “remains highly exploitable due to outdated encryption, inadequate monitoring, and human error.” She also said that cybercriminal groups often work from inside the country, taking advantage of weaknesses in government agencies and telecom networks.
The Cybercrime (Prohibition, Prevention, etc.) Act 2024, on the other hand, made the penalties for identity theft and phishing crimes harsher. However, experts say that enforcement is still not consistent.
Nigeria’s digital trust is at risk as identity theft becomes more common in the country
The problem for Nigeria isn’t stopping fraud anymore; it’s rebuilding trust in digital systems. As more people use fintech and e-governance, they are more worried about the safety of their personal information.
Dr. Maryam Ibrahim, a researcher at Covenant University who studies digital policy, said that Nigeria will keep reacting instead of preventing unless it hires more skilled cybersecurity professionals.
A recent NDPC report found that Nigeria has fewer than 9,000 certified cybersecurity professionals working for a population of more than 220 million. This is much lower than the global average.
Identity threats will keep spreading in Nigeria until the country closes the gap in talent and infrastructure. This will make people less confident in everything from public record systems to financial inclusion.