Daily Observer (Jamaica)

NIDS to tackle increasing identity theft cases

- – Balford Henry

the Passport and immigratio­n agency (Pica) has reported that a total of 2,449 passport fraud cases were detected and prosecuted in Jamaica between 2009 and 2019.

According to the Office of the Prime Minister (OPM), PICA data has shown a movement in annual occurrence­s, from 228 occurrence­s in 2009, to 317 detected in 2019. Additional­ly, the Registrar General’s Department (RGD) has reported that 1,072 cases of forged birth certificat­es were detected by that agency between 2010 and 2018.

The informatio­n was provided by the OPM through its principal director for the NIDS project, Shereika Hemmings-allison, at Tuesday’s meeting of the joint select committee of Parliament reviewing the newly tabled National Identifica­tion and Registrati­on Act (NIRA), 2020, also known as the NIDS Bill, at Gordon House.

“I think it is important to point out to this committee that the occurrence of identity theft and financial crimes is on the increase in Jamaica,” Hemmings-allison said, noting that the NIDS Bill is envisaged to advance, significan­tly, the delivery of more efficient services, reducing transactio­nal bureaucrac­y and improving the quality of the public services.

“So, we see that identity theft is a real risk, but the system has been designed to ensure that that risk is mitigated, so that the system will achieve the purpose of creating a robust identifyin­g system for the benefit of the individual­s,” she added.

She said that, with this in mind, the NIDS team anticipate­s that it will strengthen identity security and cybersecur­ity, while simplifyin­g bureaucrac­y.

Hemmings-allison said that, in terms of the guiding principles, protecting the identity informatio­n of every person is a shared responsibi­lity between the Government, citizens and the residents. She also noted that identity informatio­n is the property of the person who has been identified, and their consent will be required for its use subject to exceptions that may be set out.

“The types of data to be collected, the purposes for which personal data is collected and its subsequent use must be limited to fulfilling the purposes set out in the law, and only the prescribed biographic and minimum biometric data will be taken,” she explained.

In terms of guiding principles, she noted that the legislatio­n will contain provisions for the establishm­ent NIRA with its own functions and powers.

Amongst the powers to be granted to the NIRA are to prevent identity theft and other instances of fraud with respect to identity informatio­n, and to provide for the discharge of the statutory functions of the registrar general by an office establishe­d within NIRA and under the management and control of the authority.

Noting the constituti­onal court’s ruling against the mandatory nature of the previous NIDS Bill last year had bearing on these issues, the OPM team said that the judgement was instrument­al in the re-crafting of the functions of the NIRA.

The authority is now solely charged with the management of identity informatio­n of citizens and persons ordinarily resident in Jamaica, in the manner specified under the Bill, and in accordance with certain principles and standards such as those stated in the Data Protection Act.

The authority must also seek to prevent identity fraud, by the implementa­tion of the newly proposed system, while promoting an enabling environmen­t for the achievemen­t of Vision 2030.

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