Nigeria has been placed in Tier 3 in the 2024 Global Cybersecurity Index by the International Telecommunication Union. The current GCI 2024 ranked countries into five tiers, with Tier 1 having the highest cybersecurity commitment across legal, technological, organisational, capacity-building, and cooperative criteria.
Tier 3 country Nigeria is one of 105 that have improved digital infrastructure but are still developing cybersecurity frameworks.
Nigeria was rated as “establishing” its cybersecurity efforts, demonstrating growth in digital services and connections but underlining the need for more development to incorporate cybersecurity measures properly.
The research noted that Nigeria had improved its cybersecurity despite such limitations. It also noted a “cyber capacity gap” in several nations, including Nigeria, due to skills, staffing, and budget issues.
“Building trust in the digital world is paramount,” said ITU Secretary-General Doreen Bogdan-Martin. “The progress seen in the Global Cybersecurity Index is a sign that we must continue to focus efforts to ensure that everyone, everywhere, can safely and securely manage cyber threats in today’s increasingly complex digital landscape.”
The research also showed that the world’s least developed countries were making progress, but they required support to accelerate.
GCI 2024 statistics showed that the typical LDC had the same cybersecurity status as many non-LDC developing countries in 2021.
ITU Telecommunication Development Bureau Director Cosmas Zavazava said, “The Global Cybersecurity Index 2024 shows significant improvements by countries that are implementing essential legal measures, plans, capacity-building initiatives, and cooperation frameworks, especially in strengthening incident response capabilities.
“ITU’s cybersecurity projects and programs are supporting those national efforts to more effectively manage cyberthreats, and I hope that the progress demonstrated by this latest index encourages countries to do more in developing secure and trustworthy digital systems and networks.”