Finance Bill demos: Safaricom denies disclosing Kenyans’ information to gov’t
Safaricom on Tuesday said it has not shared
its customers’ information with the government amid increased arrests in what
is seen as the state’s suppression of Kenyans opposing the unpopular Finance Bill
2024.
Social media users accused the telecommunications
company of conniving with the police in sharing customers’ location information
to track Kenyans. This came after tens of vocal protesters were arrested in the lead-up to
Tuesday’s demos.
As a result, Kenyans threatened to boycott
the network provider.
But in a statement, Safaricom said it
respects its customers' privacy and adheres to Kenya’s data protection laws.
The Data Protection Act requires data
processors and controllers to safeguard digital and physical personal data from
unauthorised access, disclosure, alteration, or destruction.
“We do not share any customer data unless
explicitly required of us via a court order. On the current issue in
discussion, we confirm that we have not received any court order requiring us
to share customer information with any government agency,” the telco said.
Safaricom controls the largest market share
in Kenya with an active mobile subscription
of 44 million, according to a December 2023 report by the Communications
Authority of Kenya.
It is followed by
Airtel at 18 million while Telkom has 2 million.
Equitel and Jamii
Telco have 1 million and 456,000 active subscribers respectively.
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