The apparent loss of interest by the President Muhammadu Buhari-led
administration may have put a final nail on the coffin of the $3.5
billion so far spent on the electronic national identity card (National
e-ID) project.
Sources inform that the Presidency has been unable
to resolve a series of crises that have been stalling the continuation
of the project initially billed to have attained 70% achievement by
2016.
It could be recalled that former president Goodluck
Jonathan, with funfair, publicly launched the all-purpose plastic card
in September 2014 and assured all that the cards were targeted at
reaching the 170 million Nigerian population, in a staggered exercise,
which would see 2017 as deadline for all to have it.
The card is
targeted at solving many identity-related issues, including being used
as ATM card, voters’ card and ECOWAS travelling id card, among others.
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A
monitoring committee, made up of the then Finance Minister, Mrs. Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, former managing director Zenith Bank, Mr. Jim Ovia and
Chairman HEIR holding, Mr. Tony Elumelu, was constituted to give the
projection the needed pep.
Two firms, MasterCard and Chams
constituted a consortium of companies to work with the National Identity
Management Company (NIMC) to achieve results.
But a faceoff
between the NIMC and one of the companies, Cham barely a year after the
public presentation of the programme, was said to have ended in court.
However,
the intervention of well-meaning Nigerians led to a negotiation,
capable of resolving the claim by Cham that about N25 billion damages be
paid it by NIMC for alleged breach of contract.
Said Mr. Charles
Samuel, an official of Ria Pay Solution, one of the firms in the
programme: “The identity programme can be said to be going on, but in
such a slow pace that it could be said to have been dead. It can only
take a renewed interest from the government to achieve the projected
result.
“If the initial zeal by government were sustained, by end
of 2016, at least 60 per cent success would have been recorded before
end of 2017 meant to be the ultimate end result.”
It was learnt
that the directive by President Buhari that all various establishments
that are issuing identity cards be collapsed into one portal may have
further introduced another bottle neck that would not allow the
multi-billion dollar identity card project to see the light of day soon.
At
some public offices, where NIMC has its posters announcing that the
services exist, members of the public were subjected to payment of some
amount of money to be captured in their data bank, without being issued
the card.
Mrs. Bisi Adeyinka, a Lagos-based petty trader put it
this way: “After paying N500 for my details to be captured, I was asked
to go to the Air Force Base in Ikeja. It was my third day of such visit
that I was attended to, and I have been asked to go to the zonal
headquarters of NIMC for my card, and this I have done without any card
given me.”
So far, the e-ID card is all but abandoned, and the
huge resources committed to the project, like many other government
initiatives may just be set to go down the drain.
RipplesNigeria ….without borders, without fears
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