Ministry of Communications and Information Technology (Saudi Arabia) explained

Ministry of Communication and Information Technology
Formed:1926
Jurisdiction:Government of Saudi Arabia
Headquarters:Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Minister1 Name:Abdullah Alswaha
Website:Official English Website

The Ministry of Communications and Information (MCIT;) 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]

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. 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. In 1953, the telegraph, post, and telephone facilities were reported Ministry of Transport which was established in that year.

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. In 2003, the name of the Ministry of Post, Telegraph, and Telephone was amended to be the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology.

Responsibilities

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

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

  1. Web site: Ministry of Communications and Information Technology. Brief History. www.mcit.gov.sa. 2019-03-17.
  2. Web site: From telegrams to digital services: IT has traveled a long way in Saudi Arabia. 2018-09-23. Arab News. en. 2019-03-17.
  3. Web site: Newly Appointed Princes, Ministers Swear In Before the King. Al-awsat. Asharq. eng-archive.aawsat.com. UK. 2019-03-17.
  4. Web site: MCIT Tasks. 2017-10-25. www.mcit.gov.sa. en. 2019-03-17.
  5. Web site: National Digitization Unit : Ministry of Communications and Information Technology. www.mcit.gov.sa. 2019-03-17.
  6. Web site: Yesser e-government program Overview. www.yesser.gov.sa. 2019-03-17.
  7. Web site: The National Center For Digital Certification (NCDC) :Ministry of Communications and Information Technology. www.mcit.gov.sa. 2019-03-17.
  8. Web site: NCDC Services. 2018-07-24. www.mcit.gov.sa. en. 2019-03-17.

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