A staggering N12.5 billion was siphoned from Nigerian telecom consumers over the past years (2019-2023), through escalating digital fraud schemes, newly released industry data by PWC reveals.
This financial loss comes amid warnings from regulatory authorities and security experts regarding the emerging threat of Artificial Intelligence (AI)-powered cybercrime, which threatens to outpace existing countermeasures.
The stark figures are detailed in a recent sectoral analysis by PwC, which underscores a deepening crisis in the nation’s digital economy. While telecommunications have become the backbone of Nigeria’s economic activity, the infrastructure has simultaneously become a prime hunting ground for sophisticated criminal networks.
The reported losses encompass a range of illicit activities, including SIM swap fraud, phishing expeditions, and impersonation scams that exploit consumer trust in mobile money and communication services.
In the PwC report,59 per cent of e‑banking customers in Nigeria have fallen victim to scams, a trend that points to telecom networks as a critical infrastructure for mobile banking alerts, authentication messages, and digital payment links as increasingly attractive targets for criminals.
Similarly, stakeholders point to a troubling evolution in the modus operandi of these fraudsters. Hence, the integration of Artificial Intelligence is lowering the barrier for cybercriminals while amplifying the scale of their attacks
AI-driven voice cloning, automated phishing, and deepfake technologies are increasingly being deployed to bypass traditional security protocols, making it difficult for the average citizen to distinguish between legitimate service providers and malicious actors.
The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) and financial regulators have been scrambling to contain the menace, implementing centralised data repositories and SIM-NIN linkage policies aimed at sanitising the subscriber base.
However, financial analysts alluded that these defensive measures are struggling to keep pace with the rapid technological sophistication of the scammers.
Consumer advocacy groups have described the N12.5bn loss as a direct threat to the financial inclusion gains made over the last decade. They opined that as more Nigerians migrate to digital platforms for banking and commerce, the lack of robust, proactive security infrastructure exposes citizens to systemic risk.
Meanwhile, experts are urging the federal government to adopt a more aggressive posture, advocating for the establishment of a dedicated cybercrime task force that combines the resources of the NCC, the Nigerian Communications Satellite Limited (NIGCOMSAT), and the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA).
A senior official at a fintech firm, speaking on the condition of anonymity remarked, “We are no longer dealing with petty thieves; we are dealing with organised syndicates leveraging next-generation technology to hollow out the savings of ordinary Nigerians”
Even as the digital landscape continues to evolve, the battle against telecom fraud has shifted from mere consumer protection to a matter of national economic security, with authorities now racing against time to fortify the nation’s digital borders against the rising tide of AI-enhanced crime.
(Leadership)
