The Central Bank of Nigeria and the Bankers
Committee on Tuesday sealed a biometric solution pact with a German Firm,
Dermalog, for the development of a payment system that would be driven by
fingerprints.
The move, according to the Governor, CBN, Mr.
Lamido Sanusi, will help to revolutionise the country’s payment system.
For instance, unlike the current practice where
different instruments are used as means of identification, bank customers will
from 2014 be identified through their fingerprints.
Sanusi, while speaking at the signing of the
agreement, which was held at the central bank’s headquarters in Abuja, noted
that the system would become operational on February 14, 2014.
The move followed the recommendation of a
sub-committee chaired by the Group Managing Director, Zenith Bank Plc, Mr.
Godwin Emefiele.
The committee, made up of the Group Managing
Directors of Access Bank Plc, First Bank of Nigeria Limited, United Bank for
Africa Plc, Union Bank of Nigeria Plc and Skye Bank Plc, had shortlisted
Dermalog as the company to develop a database for the banking sector.
Emefiele said, “The company that was awarded the
contract has been given a very ambitious deadline, and before the contract was
awarded, it agreed that it would deliver in 90 days.
“The first phase of the project will connect the
central data to the banks as well as the central bank and the Nigeria Interbank
Settlement System. We believe that the company will do so, and by February 14,
2014, we are all very optimistic and looking forward for a gift from the
banking industry.
“The cost of the project is above $50m and the
banks, in their wisdom and in line with their collaborative efforts, are going
to be sharing the cost of the project, and no customer is going to be charged
for this project.”
Explaining the reason for the project, Sanusi
said it would help to provide a single biometric database that would serve the
purpose of authentication as well as address the issues of money laundering,
fraud, credit extension and financial inclusion.
He said, “The vision is that this will go beyond
the banks and it is a very tight deadline that I have set for the committee and
the committee has discussed with Dermalog; and in three months, we can
officially say that every single Nigerian bank is connected to the system; and
hopefully in the coming months, we will expect every customer of every branch
of every bank in Nigeria to have complied to this, but it goes beyond the
banking system.
“We have about a thousand microfinance banks; we
have customers of pension fund administrators; we have customers of insurance
companies; we have people who deal with the stock market, and the vision for
this is that everyone that deals with the financial system should have his
biometric data captured, and this will be used for identification, verification
and authentication.”
Sanusi said the project would not have any
negative impact on the national identity card project, adding that the
biometric database of the banking sector would help to complement the Federal
Government’s identity management project.
He said, “For a long time, we have been waiting
for the national identity card system and progress is being made, and I will
like to use this opportunity to let everybody understand that the banking
industry project is not in any way incompatible with the national identity
process.”
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