A high-profile airport confrontation has pulled back the curtain on alleged warrantless surveillance apparatus, but who investigates the investigators?
The recent clash between
former Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai and National Security Adviser Nuhu
Ribadu has exposed a troubling double standard at the heart of the digital
rights framework in Nigeria. While legal experts like Abuja-based lawyer Pelumi Olajengbesi correctly point out that phone tapping constitutes a serious
criminal offense under the Cybercrimes (Prohibition, Prevention, etc.) Act,
2015, El-Rufai's counter-allegations raise a more fundamental question: what
happens when the suspected perpetrator is the state itself?
The Accusations
Following his attempted
arrest at Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport in February, 2026, El-Rufai
publicly admitted to listening to an intercepted phone conversation in which
Ribadu allegedly ordered his detention. But he didn't stop there. In a
revealing statement, the former governor declared: "The government
thinks that they're the only ones that listen to calls...the government does it
all the time. They listen to our calls all the time without a court
order."
This isn't just political
mudslinging. These words come from someone who has operated at the highest
levels of governance; a former minister and two-term governor with intimate
knowledge of state security operations. His allegations carry institutional
weight precisely because of this is insider perspective.
The Legal Framework vs. Reality
The legal framework for
electronic surveillance appears comprehensive on paper. Section 37 of the 1999 Constitution (as amended) guarantees the right to privacy of citizens, their homes, correspondence, telephone conversations and telegraphic communications.
Furthermore, Section 12(1) of the
Cybercrimes Act, 2015 (as amended) is explicit: "Any person, who
intentionally and without authorization, intercepts by technical means,
non-public transmissions of computer data, content, or traffic data... commits
an offence and shall be liable on conviction to imprisonment for a term of not
more than 2 years or to a fine of not more than N5,000,000.00 or to both."
The law makes no exception
for government officials. The prohibition applies to "any person", a
deliberate choice of words that encompasses both private individuals and state
actors.
The Warrant Requirement
Section 39 of the
Cybercrimes Act and the Lawful Interception of Communications Regulations, 2018
establish strict conditions for lawful interception. A judge may only authorize
interception "where there are reasonable grounds to suspect that the
content of any electronic communication is reasonably required for the purposes
of a criminal investigation or proceedings."
The Regulations further
specify that a warrant is necessary except in narrowly defined emergency
situations involving: immediate danger of death or serious injury, activities
threatening national security and organized crime activities.
Even in these emergency
circumstances, Regulation 12(4) mandates that the authorized agency "shall
apply for a Warrant to the Judge within 48 hours after the interception has
occurred... and where the application is not made, or denied within 48 hours,
the interception shall terminate immediately and further interception shall be
treated as unlawful."
Who Can Request Interception?
Under Regulation 12(1) the Office of the National Security Adviser
(represented by the NSA or designee not below Assistant Commissioner rank) or the
State Security Services (represented by the Director or designee of equivalent
rank).
Notably, the NSA, Nuhu
Ribadu himself, is one of only the few officials empowered to seek lawful
interception orders. This makes El-Rufai's allegation that Ribadu ordered his surveillance
particularly significant: if such interception occurred without judicial
authorization, the very official charged with seeking warrants lawfully may
have bypassed the legal process entirely.
The Reality: Systematic Circumvention?
Yet El-Rufai's claims that "The
government does it all the time. They listen to our calls all the time without
a court order", suggest a pattern of systematic circumvention, not by
rogue actors, but by the very state apparatus charged with upholding these
laws.
If true, this represents a
fundamental breakdown of the rule of law. The regulations impose severe
penalties for non-compliance: N5,000,000 fines for violations, plus N500,000
daily penalties for continuing offenses (Regulation 16). These penalties apply
to "any person, Licensee or its officers" again, no carve-out for
government agencies. Section 12 of the Cybercrimes Act also criminalizes unlawful
interceptions of communications.
The legal framework is therefore,
clear. The alleged practice, as described by a former governor with insider
knowledge, appears to violate it systematically. This gap between law and
practice transforms surveillance regulations from protective shields into paper
tigers which are enforced against citizens while ignored by those in power.
The Expanding Surveillance Infrastructure
El-Rufai's allegations
align disturbingly with documented evidence of growing surveillance
capabilities in Nigeria. According to research from the Institute of
Development Studies, Nigeria has spent billions of dollars acquiring
sophisticated surveillance technology. The country has procured systems capable
of monitoring communications, tracking locations, and conducting mass data
collection, often with minimal transparency or oversight.
The Berkman Klein Center at
Harvard University reports that Nigeria's surveillance ecosystem includes
partnerships with international technology vendors and deployment of invasive
monitoring tools. These systems operate in what researchers describe as a legal
grey zone, where the technological capacity for surveillance far outpaces
regulatory frameworks designed to protect citizens' privacy.
The Harvard research notes
that authorities have acquired tools for intercepting mobile communications,
monitoring internet traffic, and collecting metadata on citizens' digital
activities which is precisely the kind of warrantless surveillance El-Rufai now
alleges is routine practice.
The Financial and Human Cost
The scale of investment in
surveillance infrastructure is staggering. As the IDS study reveals, the
country has channeled billions into surveillance technologies even as critical
public services remain underfunded. This spending occurs largely outside public
scrutiny, with procurement processes that lack transparency and accountability
mechanisms.
More troubling still, these
surveillance capabilities have allegedly been deployed not primarily for
national security purposes, but for monitoring political opposition, civil
society activists, and journalists. The Harvard analysis documents cases where
surveillance tools have been used to target dissenting voices rather than
genuine security threats. A pattern consistent with El-Rufai's claims about
politically motivated monitoring.
The Accountability Vacuum
Lawyer Olajengbesi has
called for security agencies to investigate El-Rufai's admission of listening
to intercepted communications. But this raises the paradox at the heart of this
affair: Who investigates allegations against the government when the
government controls the investigative machinery?
The Harvard research
highlights a critical gap in Nigeria's digital rights architecture: the absence
of independent oversight bodies with real power to monitor and sanction state
surveillance activities. While the Cybercrimes Act and the Lawful Interception
of Communications Regulations, 2018 theoretically requires judicial
authorization for interception, researchers found that compliance mechanisms
are weak and enforcement is selective.
If El-Rufai's broader
allegations are accurate, i.e., that warrantless mass surveillance of citizens'
phone calls and online activities is routine government practice, then Nigerians face a surveillance state operating outside its own legal framework. The
Cybercrimes Act and the Lawful Interception of Communications Regulations, 2018,
becomes merely decorative legislation, enforced selectively against citizens
while the state enjoys de facto immunity.
The Technology Behind the Surveillance
According to IDS findings, the
government of Nigeria has acquired sophisticated interception systems capable
of real-time monitoring of telecommunications networks. These systems can
capture voice calls, text messages, and internet communications without leaving
traces detectable to the targets. The infrastructure includes both passive
collection systems and active interception capabilities and this makes
El-Rufai's claim about routine, warrantless call monitoring technically
plausible.
The Berkman Klein Center's
investigation notes that telecommunications providers in Nigeria are often
compelled to cooperate with security agencies, sometimes through informal
pressure rather than legal process. This creates a system where lawful
interception procedures can be bypassed entirely, with communications accessed
directly through telecoms infrastructure.
What This Means for Digital Rights
This confrontation between
political heavyweights inadvertently validates long-held suspicions within the
digital rights community: that citizens' communications are subject to systematic,
warrantless monitoring. Civil society organizations have raised these concerns
for years, often dismissed as conspiracy theories. When someone of El-Rufai's
stature; with decades navigating power corridors, makes such allegations, it
demands serious attention.
The Harvard study
emphasizes that unchecked surveillance powers fundamentally undermine
democratic participation. When citizens cannot communicate privately, they
cannot organize effectively, hold government accountable, or exercise their rights
to free expression and assembly. The chilling effect of pervasive surveillance
extends far beyond those directly targeted.
The Way Forward
1. Independent oversight
mechanisms for state surveillance activities with real
enforcement power as recommended by researchers at IDS, including civilian
oversight boards with subpoena power and security clearances to audit
surveillance operations.
2. Transparency reports from telecommunications providers and security agencies about
interception requests and warrants, a practice the Berkman Klein Center
identifies as essential for accountability in democratic societies.
3. Judicial reforms ensuring that interception warrants are genuinely scrutinized, not
rubber-stamped, with specialized courts trained in digital rights and
surveillance law.
4. Legislative review of the Lawful Interception of Communications Regulations, 2018 to close
loopholes enabling abuse and align the Regulation with international human
rights standards.
5. Equal application of cybercrime laws, whether the accused is a citizen or state actor.
6. Public disclosure of surveillance procurement contracts and capabilities, as called for
by civil society researchers, to enable informed democratic debate about
surveillance powers.
Conclusion
The irony is stark: laws
designed to protect electronic privacy may be routinely violated by those
charged with enforcing it. While El-Rufai's own admission warrants
investigation, his counter-allegations expose a potentially far graver systemic
problem. The documented evidence of multi-billion dollar surveillance
infrastructure in the country, combined with research showing weak oversight
mechanisms, suggests El-Rufai may be revealing an open secret within the power
elite.
Until the country
establishes genuine accountability for state surveillance activities, the
Cybercrimes Act and Lawful Interception of Communications Regulations, 2018
will remain what many fear they already are i.e., tools for controlling
citizens rather than protecting their digital rights.
The question remains
unanswered: In a democracy, when the government allegedly breaks the law on a
mass scale, who investigates?
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