The National Identification Management Commission (NIMC) has
stated that it registered and issued national identification numbers to about
38 million Nigerians out of an estimated 200 million.
The Director-General of the commission, Aliyu Aziz, said
this on Monday at the ‘pre-EOI submission conference’ put together for
prospective licencees of the digital identity ecosystem project.
As part of the plan to address the challenges associated
with providing digital identification for all Nigerians, Aziz said the
‘ecosystem project’ aims at leveraging “on the capacities and capabilities of
public and private sector organisations in achieving digital ID rollout scale
within three to five years”.
He said for Nigeria to meet the sustainable development
goal, which includes providing legal identity for all by 2030, a collaborative
commitment from stakeholders is important.
“The world is focusing on digital identity as can be seen in
the Sustainable Development Goal 16.9 (provide legal identity for all,
including birth registration by 2030),” Aziz said.
“This means that we have just about 11 years to the
deadline.
“Thus far, the commission has successfully registered and
issued unique IDs to about 38 million Nigerians out of the country’s population
estimated to about 187 million.
“Even with the significant strides made in the last four
years, the task ahead of us is huge and require the full collaboration,
commitment and support of all stakeholders including everyone here today.”
Uche Chigbo, deputy-general manager of the commission, said
the road-map for the project aims at having “at least 4000 enrollment points
across the nation”.
“That is for every 50,000 people, there should be an
enrollment centre,” Chigbo said.
She said this process would help the commission avoid
duplicating data collection at high cost and speed up delivery.
According to Chigbo, partners who follow NIMC’s laid down
procedures in carrying out data collection, will be paid “per successful
enrollment(that is if a NIN is generated)”.
She said NIMC targets not only Nigerians living in the
country, but also Nigerians in the diaspora.
“We are targeting adults, children, foreign legal residents,
refugees and internally displaced persons in Nigeria,” she added.
She also said coverage would be extended to “undocumented”
people who claim to be Nigerians and have lived in the country for long but have
no means of proving it.
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