The Deputy Director, Public Relations, Department of
State Security, Marylin Ogar, on Monday warned Nigerians not to allow
even their relatives use their phones to make calls, warning that they w
ill be liable for any crime related call made with their phones.
“If you are caught either selling a car without proper documentation,
if you are caught, maybe because you want to be a good Muslim or
Christian, and you give your phone to people when you cannot monitor
such conversations, or you are caught giving out your bank account
details for money to be transferred or paid in by anybody, of course
your are liable” warning that “ignorance of the law is not an excuse”
she said
She also defended the decision by the federal government to close
down schools and restrict movement during the World Economic Forum on
Africa taking place in Abuja from May 7-9.
Speaking as a guest on Channels Television’s breakfast show, Sunrise
Daily, Ogar who had declined to comment on the issue earlier, said “mine
is to come and speak to Nigerians to be more conscious”.
She however noted that one of the reasons for the restriction is the
fact that “we are going to have very top government officials from other
countries coming in and there is going to be huge traffic” insisting
that “I wouldn’t come here and start to discuss what the President of
the Federal Republic (of Nigeria) has discussed”.
Ogar noted that “mine is to bring people to par with what they are expected to do” when the forum commences and after it ends.
She warned Nigerians to desist from giving out their bank account
information details to anyone to make payments into “no matter the
rewards” adding that network providers have made it possible for users
to purchase recharge cards of as low as N1 and at such people should not
borrow their phones to anybody.
She said “investigations are ongoing into some of the security
challenges we have had in the past and some of the people we have been
able to pick up and we are talking to, we discover that they refuse
using their own phones and maybe out of the gullibility of their
neighbours, who believe you must be your neighbours keeper, they use
their phones to make all sort of calls”.
She urged Nigerians to exercise patience over the effort security
agencies are making to curb the challenges the country is facing adding
that security operations cannot be discussed on national television or
the pages of newspapers.
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