FG intensifies automated birth, death registration process
Federal Government has developed an electronic Civil Registration and Vital Statistics System (eCRVS) and a Geospatial Data Repository to boost birth, death and other registrations. This was disclosed by the Chairman, National Population Commission (NPC), Alhaji Nasir Kwarra at a news conference in Abuja, adding that the effort was to scale up the automated registration process in the country.
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He explained that during the Sixth Session of the Conference of African Ministers responsible for Civil Registration and Vital Statistics (CVRS) held in 2022, African ministers made several resolutions and encouraged all countries in the continent to automate the CRVS process and ensure the implementation of the UN Legal Identity Agenda.
He said, “member states were further encouraged to develop an electronic technology-driven system to boost data generation and civil statistics. As part of Nigeria’s way of complying with the resolutions of the African ministers and scaling up the automated process in Nigeria, NPC, in collaboration with UNICEF developed the eCRVS Operational Readiness Assessment Report. This shows the potential of digital technology in providing transformative outcomes in CRVS and integrating data from multiple systems to securely store data at scale, in a cost-effective way in Nigeria.”
Kwarra said that the report provided the holistic approach to the future state vision for digitised CRVS, the rollout of decentralised digital birth registration system as part of CRVS, and identified areas to strengthen the automation of the system.
He added that recommendations that would significantly increase the likelihood to reach universal digitalised birth registration system in Nigeria had been made.
“The report ushered in the bold step taken by the commission for a transformative innovation of the CRVS system by developing a Public Private Partnership (PPP) arrangement between the commission and Barnksforte Technologies Limited, an innovative indigenous ICT solution provider. The PPP arrangement is to promote the system as a complete electronic system that digitalises all civil registrations such as birth registration, still birth registration, birth attestation, adoption, marriage notification, divorce notification, migration and death. The system provides a digital certificate in all cases, an accessible verification platform to registered organisations, and has a central management system (dashboard) that depicts and analyses collated civil registrations into vital statistics for proper decision-making.”
The chairman said that the process marks a complete departure from traditional paper-based recording of vital events to state-of-the-art digital solution that conforms to international best practices.
He added that the eCRVS system promises to revolutionise how vital events are recorded, tracked and analysed in the country.
The Chief of Child Protection, UNICEF, Mr Ibrahim Cisse, said only 32 per cent of children in rural areas were registered compared to 60 per cent of those in urban areas.
He said that 20,000 children are born in Nigeria daily, amounting to about 6.57 to eight million children born yearly.
“How can we ensure that these children whose births occur mostly in rural areas and are not registered get registered?,” he asked.
He said, “we are working alongside the NPC and we are on a big birth registration drive in 24 states including FCT with over 23,000 registrers working and those registrations are free of cost. So, for you to have access to education and other social services, you need to have the birth certificate, which is the proof of birth and that is an interest to us.”
NAN/WUMI