One of the greatest assets any nation can possess in the fight against crime is not merely sophisticated weapons, advanced surveillance cameras, or a larger security force. It is a comprehensive, accurate, and constantly updated citizens’ database.
A country that does not know its people will inevitably struggle to protect them. Criminals thrive in anonymity. They exploit weak identity management systems, fake addresses, forged documents, and fragmented records to evade detection. Every gap in a nation’s database is a potential hiding place for criminals.
An integrated citizens’ database links essential information such as birth registration, national identity, residence, biometrics, driver’s licence, passport, tax records, voter registration, vehicle ownership, and other lawful records into a secure system accessible to authorised agencies. Such a system enables law enforcement to identify suspects more quickly, verify identities with confidence, trace criminal networks, and solve cases that might otherwise remain unresolved.
Countries with effective identity management systems consistently demonstrate greater success in combating terrorism, kidnapping, financial fraud, cybercrime, human trafficking, and organised crime. Intelligence-led policing depends heavily on reliable data rather than guesswork.
Nigeria has made notable progress through the National Identification Number (NIN), the Bank Verification Number (BVN), biometric voter registration, and digital passport systems. However, these initiatives remain largely fragmented. The next crucial step is secure interoperability, allowing authorised institutions to exchange relevant information within clear legal and privacy safeguards.
Beyond fighting crime, a reliable citizens’ database enhances national planning, healthcare delivery, education, disaster response, social welfare, tax administration, electoral integrity, and financial inclusion. It becomes a foundation for national development.
Naturally, such a system must be accompanied by robust data protection laws, independent oversight, cybersecurity measures, and strict accountability to prevent abuse. Citizens must have confidence that their personal information will be used lawfully and responsibly.
The debate, therefore, should not be whether Nigeria needs a comprehensive citizens’ database. The real question is how quickly it can build one that is accurate, secure, transparent, and trusted.
In today’s digital age, intelligence is powered by information, and information begins with identity. A nation that can reliably identify its citizens is better equipped to protect them, deliver services efficiently, and uphold the rule of law.
A secure nation begins with a secure identity system. Without a credible citizens’ database, crime fighting will always remain reactive rather than proactive.
Ven Samson Kunle Popoola JP.
PCRC ZONE 2 CHAIRMAN.