●Banks spend ₦45b on BVN ●SIM card registration
gulps ₦46.1b ●FG okays ₦30.7b for
identity cards ●Voters registration costs
₦87b
The multiple data
capturing and registration exercises in the country are costing government
billions of naira which, according to stakeholders, amount to duplication and
waste of human and financial resources.
The
Guardian Nigeria report continues:
Many
Nigerians probably must have participated in not less than four data capturing
processes in the last seven years, with government agencies collecting the same
set of information including biometrics each time.
These
exercises include the voters’ registration through the Independent National
Electoral Commission (INEC); Bank Verification Number (BVN) through the
financial institutions; international passport registration through the
Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS); registration of Subscribers Identification
Module (SIM) through the Mobile Network Operators (MNOs) and the Nigerian
Communications Commission (NCC); Driver’s Licence through the Federal Road
Safety Commission (FRSC) and lately the National Identity Number and Electronic
Identification Card through the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC).
It
was learnt that the National Population Commission (NPC) is also warming up for
another data capturing should it get the nod to go ahead with its planned 2018
census. Attempt by police authorities to introduce another biometric capturing
last year for use by the security agents had to be stopped by a court following
public outcry against the exercise.
A
senior executive in one of the new generation banks told The Guardian anonymously that banks
spent close to ₦45 billion on the BVN registrations. Since February 14, 2014
when BVN was launched by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) through the Bankers’
Committee in collaboration with all banks in the country and February 2017,
about 51.7 million accounts have been registered.
Within
the last five years, the NCC and the MNOs spent over ₦46.1 billion on SIM
registrations, which also included biometric capturing. Specifically, while NCC
spent about ₦6.1 billion, the GSM operators, including MTN, Globacom, Airtel
and 9mobile (Etisalat) jointly spent about ₦40 billion.
On
September 28, 2011, the Federal Executive Council under former President
Goodluck Jonathan had okayed ₦30.66 billion to NIMC to embark on the provision
of an electronic national identity card for all Nigerians of 18 years old and
above in the first phase of the exercise. The then Minister of Information,
Labaran Maku, at the end of the meeting, explained that the e-national identity
would assist Nigeria tackle some security issues as well as solve so many
challenges of statistics in various sectors of the economy.
The
Director-General of NIMC, Aliyu Aziz, revealed recently that out of the 18.5
million enrolments and registrations made since 2012, when the project started,
the commission has only been able to issue 1.2 million cards.
According
to a report, in 2015, the INEC spent about N87 billion on voters’ registration
and other data-capturing activities. To a telecoms expert, Kehinde Aluko, the
seeming confusion arising from the uncoordinated biometric collection and
storage should be resolved in favour of a single useful database.
Aluko
urged NIMC to collaborate with NPC and other agencies involved in data
collection in accelerating the harmonization of the various databases currently
existing in silos in the country. In an interaction with journalists, the
President, Nigeria Computer Society (NCS), Professor Shola Aderounmu, said current
multifarious databases in the country created general inconveniences to
citizens, who repeatedly have to queue long hours for registration.
The
President, Association of Telecommunications Companies of Nigeria (ATCON),
Olusola Teniola, in an interview with The Guardian, noted that the
multiple exercises indicate a lack of a data template required to capture the
different types of information sought by each agency and company in the case of
BVN and SIM registrations.
According
to Olusola, the cost of these exercises is increasing because Nigeria suffers
from a science-technology deficit, where adoption of technology is done from
different sources and no collaborative thought is given to the national
outcome. Commenting on the matter, the Director General, Delta State Innovation
Hub, Chris Uwaje, said data, database and biometrics are strictly software
issues of the IT profession, stressing that this unique domain drives the World
ICT Ecosystem today.
Uwaje,
a former President of the Institute of Software Practitioners of Nigeria
(ISPON), noted that costs of biometrics applications and solutions vary,
depending on needs and intensity of requirement.
Uwaje, who recommended the establishment of the office of the IT General of the Federation, said it may be difficult to calculate the amount the country has lost to these duplicated exercises.
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