The SA Smart ID Card Thread

LazyLion

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It would take up to eight years to issue all South Africans with so-called smart card identity documents, Home Affairs Minister Naledi Pandor said on Thursday.

The department believed once the process was underway it could print some three million ID cards a year, using the government printing works, Pandor told reporters ahead of her department's budget vote in Parliament.

Last year, soon after she succeeded Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma in the portfolio, Pandor predicted the transition would take four years.

Home affairs would start issuing the cards in stages from July this year, she said.

"This will be a major step towards creating a modern, reliable population register."

It was hoped the microchip technology in the new cards would cut down on identity fraud.

"We are going to have to work really hard and smart, and really begin to ensure we get the necessary infrastructure into as many offices as possible, but I think... we should not continue to issue that book which is easily duplicated and really causes lots of problems," Pandor said.

She said her department believed it would have achieved registry security when birth registry was the "only point of entry" to the database.

To this end, she said, the department was making headway in achieving its long-standing goal of registering all babies within a month of birth.

Last year, it registered more than 602,000 births. It intended increasing this by at least eight percent this year. Pandor said she intended abolishing issuing of birth certificates by 2015 "because it opens us to a lot of abuse, a lot of identity theft, a lot of trafficking of children".

She hoped to finally invalidate all remaining duplicate IDs -- some 20,000 compared to half a million four years ago -- by the end of the year.

"I now wish to announce that it is my intention to invalidate duplicate IDs by the end of the year at the stroke of a pen."

Pandor said the government had "at last" agreed to set up a new border management agency to manage all points of entry and monitor the country's frontiers.

It would be led by home affairs and would include the police, defence force, revenue service and the departments of health and agriculture.

Pandor told MPs in her budget speech she had no interest in altering existing policies to craft her own legacy as home affairs minister after succeeding Dlamini-Zuma, who was widely credited for turning the department around.

She has taken the department's existing policies as "my mandate," she said. The minister said the department's shortcomings remained backlogs in asylum management and the processing of permanent and temporary resident applications.

Deputy Home Affairs Minister Fatima Chohan said the department was introducing tracking technology to monitor the progress of asylum applications, which included sending applicants updates on their cellphones.

Chohan said there was dramatic decrease in the number of asylum seekers South Africa received since 2011. It appeared the trend was continuing and the country was losing its status as the first port of call for Africans fleeing war or poverty.

"All indications are that in this year, barring the outbreak of war or other catastrophic occurrence on the continent and our region, we are set to see further reductions in the number of asylum seekers."

Following the announcement last week that the refugee status of Angolans living in South Africa would be rescinded on August 31, Chohan reiterated the government was urging Angolans to return home as that country had now enjoyed more than a decade of stability.

She said the department was still conducting a count, but indications were that there were just under 20,000 Angolans in South Africa. A final figure would be announced within a few weeks.

Those who wanted to remain in the country would have to apply to home affairs for the necessary documents to legitimise their stay.

According to Pandor, in 2010 about 1.9 million people, or 3.7 percent of those living in South Africa, were immigrants, with the majority hailing from Zimbabwe.


Source : Sapa /ef/hdw/th/ks
Date : 09 May 2013 16:12
 
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I'd love smart card ID, much easier to carry around than a book. It would also be less likely to be damaged than the current books. I also wonder, why are ID books still, as far as I know, issued only in English and Afrikaans?
 
I can see cloning happening on a large scale. Don't tell me the stuff is secure.
 
They should forget about this smart card nonsense coz in eight years time tech will have leaped so much that our consciousness will be uploaded to cellphone simecards and tsotsis will be doing simswaps waya waya.
 
Just an update. I said that the Goverment had been working on the smart card for 10 years, but I was wrong.

It is actually more than 13 years.

http://www.info.gov.za/speeches/2000/000301503p1001.htm

"Consequently, it is expected that the first HANIS smart card will be issued during the last quarter of the year 2001."

So when completed it will have been more than 21 years.

Talk about African Time.
 
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Wait, what was that about not issuing birth certificates any more? How would that work?
 
21 yrs woah.. With 8yrs for the actual rollout :-|

Still, what % of South Africans live within the major cities and how will the rollout be distributed?

The major rollout hold up they mention is the printing process which is limited(hope they factored in growth). Could argue they increase the rollout in a temporary fashion but then how many more illegals would get citizenship in the process :p so if this slow way is corruption free cool
 
ID Cards Roll Out in July: Pandor

Green, bar-coded identity books will be replaced with identity smart cards from July, Home Affairs Minister Naledi Pandor said on Thursday.

"We will begin with the issuing of the cards to new applicants and those who need re-issuing of identity documents from July this year," she told reporters in Pretoria.

The South African company, Altech Card Solutions, had won the R40 million tender to supply the Government Printing Works (GPW) with card personalisation machines and an automated mailing solution, manufactured by DataCard in the US.

The leading identity card manufacturer, Gemalto Southern Africa, had won the Euro16m (about R199m) tender to supply pre-printed polycarbonate cards containing a contactless microchip.

"Through a rigorous tender process, GPW identified two world-class suppliers, each with extensive experience in their field...," said Pandor.

"The smart card is part of the national effort to consolidate the restoration, common citizenship and identity and dignity to our people," she said.

Pandor said it would take six or seven years to phase out the old identity documents (ID).

She said the identity card roll-out would start at 27 regional offices.

Director general Mkuseli Apleni said those who had fraudulent IDs were in trouble.

"This is a security-tight process... Hard luck to those with fraudulent documents."


Source : Sapa /gm/tk/clh/dd
Date : 23 May 2013 10:56
 
So who is going to join me at home affairs in July to get our grubby paws on the new card?
 
Mandela gets Smart ID Card

The home affairs department issued a smart ID card for former president Nelson Mandela as the ailing statesman celebrated his 95th birthday on Thursday.

On his father's behalf, Mandela's daughter Zindzi Mandela-Motlhajwa was handed a replica of the card by former president Thabo Mbeki at the Union Buildings, in Pretoria.

Home Affairs Minister Naledi Pandor said the transformation from the ID book to the high tech ID card was symbolic of South Africa's expedition in the democratic dispensation.

"Today we reach another milestone in the process of restoring dignity to South African citizens. Today we begin the process of replacing the ID books with the smart ID cards, which are symbolic of our liberation," she said.

Pandor said the first smart cards would be issued to eminent people including President Jacob Zuma, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, Graca Machel, Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu, and Mbeki.

Other recipients of the first batch of cards would be Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe, former president FW de Klerk, and struggle veterans Sophie de Bruyn, Andrew Mlangeni, Ahmed Kathrada and Dennis Goldberg.

Pandor said other recipients include aged South Africans, some of whom were 100-years-old.

"The ID smart card is a way of affirming citizenship and using digital technology to protect the integrity of our identity as South Africans. It was here at the Union Building on May 10 in 1994 that [former] president Mandela became the first president of a democratic South Africa.

"We wish our founding president an extremely happy birthday," she said.

Mandela has spent the past 41 days in a Pretoria hospital.

On Thursday, the presidency said his health was "steadily improving".

"Madiba remains in hospital in Pretoria, but his doctors have confirmed that his health is steadily improving," spokesman Mac Maharaj said in a statement.

Until now, his condition has been described as critical but stable.

"On behalf of government and all the people of South Africa, we wish Madiba a joyous 95th birthday," Zuma said.

"We are proud to call this international icon our own as South Africans and wish him good health."

In 2009, July 18 was declared Mandela Day to honour the former statesman, with people encouraged to dedicate 67 minutes of their time to nation-building and charity in recognition of his service towards securing democracy and restoring human dignity.

"We thank all our people for supporting Madiba throughout the hospitalisation with undying love and compassion," said Zuma.

"We also thank all for responding to the call to give Madiba the biggest birthday celebration ever this year."


Source : Sapa /jm/tk/clh
Date : 18 Jul 2013 08:10
 
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