Today's Headlines
- Two Exhibitions Are On At Ramoma, Nairobi
- Country to Review Tourism Law
- Econet Wireless Finally Rolls Out
- Odinga Warns of Civil Unrest
- Mulee Rules Out Harambee Stars U-Turn
- Taking Up a Women's Agenda
- More Than 6,000 Christian Youth Converge for Prayers
- Catholic Church Outraged By MPs' Refusal to Pay Tax
- Pope Benedict Praying for Release of Abducted Nuns
- Thousands Flee Amid Fears of Border Clashes
- Malaria Rates Plummet Among Children
- Winning Against HIV Stigma Behind Bars
- First Congress of Federation of African Journalists a Historic Milestone, Says IFJ
- Archbishop Lele Urges State to Act as Food Crisis Bites
- Regional Workshop Focus Border Management, Irregular Migration
- Silverbird Acquires Kenya's Nu Metro, Starts Operations in Ghana
- Raila is Evil, Says Minister
- Man Charged With Abduction of Two Catholic Sisters
- UN Censures State On Torture
- Agencies Seek $390 Million to Offset Climate And Food Risks
- UN-Backed Scheme Gives 3,000 Prisoners Clean Water and Sanitation
- Samosa Festival is On in Nairobi
- Heartstrings in Another Comedy
- Govts, Investors Engage RVR in Rail Bid
- Mwangi Replaces Mwebesa At NSE
- Riepa Hosts Business Association
- ICTR Petitions UN for Arrest of Kabuga
- UBA to Invest SH360 Billion in Kenya
- Free Movement of People Too, Not Just Goods and Capital
- Judges Running Out of Money?
The Nation (Nairobi)
May 13, 2008
Editorial Article
The National Registration Bureau is celebrating the fact that it is now able to process 40,000 national identity cards per day. That is a laudable achievement given that for youth turning 18 and requiring identity cards, the long wait and constant delays have always been costly.
An ID is mandatory requirement for every adult, and without it, one cannot register as a voter, open a bank account, secure a job and do so many of the ordinary everyday things where proof of identity is required.
What is puzzling, however, is that the department is investing in speeding up issuance of cards it admits are based on expensive and obsolete technology, while at the same time working on a completely separate project for the so-called third generation IDs.
One would assume then that good money is being used to make more efficient a system that will soon be discarded.
Perhaps it might be wiser to concentrate more on getting the new ID card system in place as fast as possible.
It is important, however, that all the processes around the new system be handled with utmost professionalism.
In many circles, the proposed third-generation IDs are already being mentioned in the same breath as the infamous projects-the new passport and immigration control systems, police communications and other security procurement-associated with a small group of wheeler dealers, more designed to fleece the public coffers than to provide value for money.
This is not to say that there is anything untoward, but in the light of such concerns it is imperative that the department do everything possible to ensure the project is transparent and above board.


