President Goodluck Jonathan on Thursday launched a national electronic identity card scheme, which backers said would boost access to financial and government services in Africa’s most populous nation.
The head of state was issued with his own card, which features a credit card style chip with personal as well as biometric data and doubles up as a prepaid charge and debit card.
Some Nigerian government agencies, from the police to the Independent National Electoral Commission, have embarked on their own separate ID card schemes.
Jonathan said the plan was to eventually include details such as drivers' licence, health insurance, tax and pension information on the single card.
"The regime of duplication of
biometric databases must now
have to give way to
harmonisation and unification
with the e-ID scheme, which
shall be the primary database,"
he told reporters.
Only 32 percent of Nigeria’s adult population are thought to have bank accounts, according to a 2012 study. Nigeria’s central bank has been pushing for a move away from cash to electronic payments and has trialled a scheme in the financial capital, Lagos, with the help of private partners, but the pilot project has not been plain sailing, with retailers and customers often facing frequent power supply and connectivity problems that slowed down transactions.
The cards will be available initially to Nigerians aged 16 and older and all residents in the country for more than two years.
Cardholders will be given a unique national identification number, and have to provide fingerprint data, a photo and digital signature to cut the risk of fraud and embezzlement.
The scheme has so far cost about
seven billion naira ($ 42.5 million, 32 million euros), according to the National Identity Management
Commission.
Financial services firm MasterCard, the scheme’s payment technology provider, said 13 million cards would be available in the first phase, with more than 100 million to be issued in total.
"Nigeria is ready for this," the
firm’s head of Sub-Saharan
African operations, Daniel
Mohin, told AFP.
"Nigeria has been left out of
electronic financial payment
for decades but now Nigeria is
saying we want to take our
rightful place in payment."
"There has not been a project of
this magnitude that’s been
rolled out at this scale."
Africa’s most populous nation has an unenviable reputation for fraud, particularly involving financial
transactions, but Monehin said, "the card was secured with the best form of security that is available."
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