The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has disclosed that the country’s internet subscribers dropped by 9.6 percent representing 14.5 million in one year.
This was made known by the commission in a recent update of industry statistics posted on its website.
According to the data, the total number of active internet subscribers, which hit 154.88 million — an all-time high — in November 2020, dropped to 140.34 million at the end of October 2021.
In December 2020, the federal government directed telecommunications companies to suspend the sales and reactivation of new SIM cards.
The policy denied new entrants into the country access to purchase mobile lines while existing users who want to retrieve their lost lines were not allowed access.
The government had premised the decision on the audit of the subscriber registration database in the country at the height of security challenges – banditry and kidnapping.
By the end of the first quarter of 2021, the policy had stiffed the telecoms industry with single-digit growth.
Airtel Africa and MTN Nigeria, the two listed telcos, had said the regulatory restrictions impacted their operations with declines in mobile subscriptions and revenue.
The government, however, lifted the ban in April but mandated the use of national identification numbers (NINs) for the issuance of new SIM cards.
Further checks by TheCable showed that MTN Nigeria posted the biggest drop in internet subscribers from 65.76 million in November 2020 to N58.32 million in October 2021, representing a 7.45 million dip.
Internet subscribers of Airtel Nigeria dropped from 41.52 million in November last year to 36.89 million in October 2021 — shedding 4.6 million subscribers.
Globacom’s internet subscribers declined from 39,91 million to 38.97 million, while 9mobile dropped from 5.90 million to 5,80 million in the same period under review.
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