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President Tinubu to Inaugurate Committee for Nationwide Census after 19 Years

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has announced plans to inaugurate a committee for the conduction of a new national population and housing census with biometric and digital components after 19 years since the last exercise in November 2006.

President Tinubu disclosed this during a meeting with officials of the National Population Commission (NPC) at the Statehouse in Abuja on Monday.

This is according to a statement released by Bayo Onanuga, the Special Adviser to the President on Information & Strategy, who noted that the committee would be set up to align the census budget to the government’s present financial realities.

The President mandated that National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) must be part of the review.

“We must ascertain who we are, how many we are, and how to manage our data. Without an accurate census, we can’t successfully plan for employment, agriculture, and food sovereignty. So many problems come up without accurate data,” he said.

He reiterated his commitment to ensuring accurate and reliable figures from the national census to strengthen development planning and improve Nigerians’ living conditions through more efficient social security.

While being briefed by the National Population Commission (NPC) Chairman, Nasir Isa Kwarra, and some other members, he explained that government incentives, such as the sale and distribution of fertilisers, could be easily improved with more reliable data and demographics.

The President told the delegation that biometric capturing should be central to the process, with multiple identification features, including facial and voice recognition.

He added: “We should work on our financial muscle well in place to lift our burden before we go and meet development partners for the census. We should work out the figures before discussing the role of development partners.

“This stop-and-go activity on the census cannot work with me. So we better have a definite path. I will set up a committee for you to look at the issues critically and do a source and application of resources. Where can we get help, and what can we lift before we embark on proclamation?”

On his part, the Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, Sen. Abubakar Atiku Bagudu, emphasised that the census data would be central to future planning and resource distribution.

His words: “At a retreat for the ministers in 2023, Mr President, you reiterated your commitment to the census, so there is no doubt about your desire and commitment to have the census. In fact, at the last Federal Executive Council meeting, you asked me what the problem was, and I told you it was simply an issue of lack of ability to fund the census.”

“Even today, before this meeting, I called the NPC Chairman and restated your commitment to the census. However, the commission and all of us in the team need to agree on the minimum amount we can source to support Mr President in making the final decision.”

“The NPC indicated that 40 per cent of the funding for the 2006 census came from development partners.

“Mr President, we have been having ecosystem meetings to link the identity agencies, even the geo-spatial chaired by the ministry, because of our mandate as the supervising ministry of the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS). So the NPC, NBS, NIMC, Ministry Of Digital Economy, passport, social register, voters register, and even telecoms data have been meeting with the National Space Research and Development Agency (NASRDA) to see how much is available to the government regarding data and how much optimisation can take place,” Bagudu further stated.

In his presentation, NPC Chairman, Kwarra recounted that the last census took place in 2006, stressing that the figures were no longer relevant in planning, particularly for key sectors that directly impact the population 19 years later.

He revealed that 760,000 tablets had been acquired and stored with the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), assuring that the Commission would engage with development partners to seek support whenever President Tinubu proclaimed the new census.

Hope Ejairu

Hope Ejairu is a writer, sports analyst and journalist, with publications in print and digital media. He holds certifications in various media/journalism trainings, including AFP.

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