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Ministry of Communications and Information Technology (Saudi Arabia)

Government ministry of Saudi Arabia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ministry of Communications and Information Technology (Saudi Arabia)
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The Ministry of Communications and Information (MCIT; Arabic: وزارة الاتصالات وتقنية المعلومات) is a Saudi government ministry that was established in 1926 and is responsible for the communications and information technology sector in the kingdom.[1][2] The current minister of Communications and Information is Abdullah Alswaha appointed on 23 April 2017.[3]

Quick Facts Agency overview, Formed ...
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History

The earliest governmental entity to govern the communications and technology sectors was the Directorate of Post, Telephone and Telegraph (PTT) which was established in Makkah in 1926.[2] in 1931, the telegraph services were provided by the first mobile wireless station imported by the Kingdom, followed by the introduction of telephone service In 1934.[1] In 1953, the telegraph, post, and telephone facilities were reported Ministry of Transport which was established in that year.[1]

The rapid growth of telecommunications technology led to the establishment of the Ministry of Post, Telegraph, and Telephone in 1975 to be responsible for the telecommunications and posts sectors.[1] In 2003, the name of the Ministry of Post, Telegraph, and Telephone was amended to be the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology.[1]

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Responsibilities

The Ministry is mainly responsible for the communications and information technology in the Kingdom where many tasks have been assigned to, including:[4]

  • The supervision over the communications and information technology sector and related activities.
  • The development of policies that govern the communications and information technology sector.
  • Designing plans for the communications and information technology sector.
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National programs

The Ministry launched and supervised three national programs:

National Digitization Unit: aims at ensuring the development of platforms for a digital society, digital economy and digital homeland.[5]

Yesser: An E-Government Program aims at increasing the productivity and efficiency of the governmental sector by providing the required services and information.[6]

The National Center for Digital Certification (NCDC): This program provides systems for the infrastructure management of the public keys which an essential security technique for e-business, e-trade, and e-government over the internet.[7] this program is currently providing services such as issuing digital certificates, search for digital certificates, checking certificates and validity.[8]

See also


References

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