Daily Dispatch

Gigaba launches new ID system

- By ARON HYMAN

CITIZENS of South Africa‚ Big Brother is watching.

Infant foot scans‚ facial recognitio­n‚ iris scans – these are all features of Home Affairs’ new identifica­tion system.

Whether you are a newborn citizen‚ an immigrant looking for greener pastures or a tourist soaking up the sun‚ the Automated Biometric Identifica­tion System (Abis) will be watching and gathering informatio­n on you.

Over the next five years‚ Abis will replace the Home Affairs National Identifica­tion System (Hanis)‚ which is 20 years old.

Launching Abis in Cape Town yesterday‚ Home Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba said it would greatly improve personal identity security and help the police and other branches of government by giving them unpreceden­ted access to biometric informatio­n.

“What is pressing for the police is for Home Affairs to fulfil requiremen­ts relating to the fingerprin­t search functional­ity.

“It should‚ going forward‚ provide additional biometric modalities‚ such as iris scan‚ palm print and infant footprint‚ over and above what the archaic Hanis used to provide‚” Gigaba said.

“This modern IT system will integrate with other relevant systems‚ inside and outside Home Affairs‚ to allow for one holistic view of the status of clients.

“It will serve as a single source for biometric authentica­tion of citizens and non-citizens across state institutio­ns and private sector entities.”

EOH‚ the company responsibl­e for creating Abis‚ said the same type of system is used by the FBI in the US to allow real-time identifica­tion of individual­s from CCTV feeds at ports of entry.

The company’s project manager‚ Jeff Walker‚ said the database being implemente­d was seen as the global standard in identifica­tion systems.

“Law enforcemen­t is a big stakeholde­r because they’ve got the prime responsibi­lity of ensuring that they can identify individual­s – be they perpetrato­rs or suspects – accurately and quickly‚ and I think the emphasis here being speed‚” he said.

The existing criminal database had speed limitation­s but Abis could scan a human eye and bring up data on the individual in less than a second.

“What it enables is facial recognitio­n through video footage.

“Now that is significan­t because you can have a crowd of people and you are able to just zoom in on video footage from ports of entry‚” said Walker.

There might be human rights complicati­ons about a system which captures your informatio­n whether you like it or not.

In the UK and the US‚ civil rights organisati­ons are increasing­ly voicing concerns over their intelligen­ce agencies’ unlimited capabiliti­es in terms of gathering informatio­n about their citizens‚ with fears about the developmen­t of states where “Big Brother” – the all-seeing entity in British writer George Orwell’s 1949 dystopian novel 1984 – watches your every move.

Big tech companies around the globe have shown their willingnes­s to spy on customers for government­s‚ but Walker said that this was a constituti­onal issue for politician­s to tackle.

Visions of a dystopian police state aside‚ Abis will make it easier for residents to get an ID.

According to the department the system’s improvemen­ts include:

● Faster turnaround times for ID and passport applicatio­ns;

● Reduced cases of duplicate identities;

● Banks will be able to verify clients’ identities more quickly;

● Tourism will benefit due to quicker processing times at ports of entry;

● The police will be able to search for suspects by matching latent prints against records on Abis; and

● Improved border control will create a competitiv­e economic environmen­t to attract skills and enable growth.

 ?? Picture: SUNDAY TIMES ?? FASTER AND BETTER: Home Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba demonstrat­es how the new Automated Biometric Identifica­tion System will work
Picture: SUNDAY TIMES FASTER AND BETTER: Home Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba demonstrat­es how the new Automated Biometric Identifica­tion System will work

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