Mr. Kwesi Amissah-Arthur |
Ghana
Vice-President Kwesi Amissah-Arthur has urged ISPs to put in place effective
measures to combat internet fraud, amid rapidly increasingly cybercrime.
Ghana
is currently ranked second in Africa behind Nigeria in terms of cybercrime.
Cameroon is third.
In
Ghana cybercrime is called “Sakawa”
and it is claiming victims almost every week.
“Ghana
cybercriminals are young (21-35 years of age), highly IT skilled, agile and
technologically alert, and thought to be operating inside the country but also
moving swiftly across the sub-region, leaving a trail of destruction and tears”
– Issa
Sikiti reported.
Cybercriminals
steal more than US$600-million annually globally, and Ghanaians and Nigerians
are said to be currently collaborating with powerful global syndicates to
advance this white-collar crime on the continent.
At
least 40% of the alleged cybercriminals arrested in Ghana are Nigerians and 38%
are Ghanaians, with the nationalities of Liberia, Cote d’Ivoire and Togo
completing the list, the Journal of Information Technology Impact said, citing
police statistics.
The
Ghanaian government is not only worried about the involvement of young people
in this crime, but also about the negative publicity emanating from the
country’s ‘comfortable’ position in global cybercrime.
Ghana
Vice-President Kwesi Amissah-Arthur last week urged internet service providers
(ISPs) to put in place effective measures to combat internet fraud, which he
said was tarnishing the country’s image in the eyes of the international
community.
Amissah-Arthur
launched a desperate plea to the youth, asking them not to engage in
cybercrime, but to take full advantage of the ICT opportunities in order to
enhance themselves and change their lives.
The
government continues to tell the general public, especially internet café
operators, to watch out for cybercriminals and report them as fast as possible.
But
most internet cafés owners mentioned that they might lose income if they were
to interfere in their customers’ activities, as the latter will simply go
somewhere else.
Ghana
communications ministry said that it was working with the Commonwealth to come
up with a plan to catch those involved in the practice, both here in Ghana and
abroad.
Accounting
firm Deloitte and Touche, however, said that Ghana’s challenges of fighting
cybercrime includes the lack of password policy by most service providers and
other internet based related companies, as well as other ‘strange’
legislations.
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