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Over 6,000 Nigeriens Found In NIMC Database Amidst National Identity Clean-up
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The National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) has uncovered over 6,000 Nigeriens illegally registered in its database with the National Identification Number (NIN), prompting a widespread clean-up of the system.
This revelation comes as President Bola Tinubu directed an inter-ministerial committee to ensure a comprehensive and accurate National Social Register for the Federal Government’s social investment programmes.
Presidency sources confirmed to Punch that the Minister of Interior, Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, briefed the Federal Executive Council (FEC) on February 4, 2025, on the fraudulent registrations and ongoing database sanitization efforts.
The minister reportedly stated that the illegally acquired NINs had been withdrawn from the database as part of the clean-up initiative.
Past Cases Of Fake NIMC Agents Exposed
Concerns over the illegal registration of foreigners were first raised in October 2022, when the Defence Headquarters in Abuja disclosed that troops, in conjunction with the Nigeria Police and the Nigeria Immigration Service, arrested two suspected fake NIMC officials attempting to register non-Nigerians in border communities.
At the time, Maj.-Gen. Musa Danmadami, who served as the Director of Defence Media Operations, confirmed the arrests, stating, “It was revealed that the suspects had visited the Gagamari IDP camp in the Niger Republic to register non-Nigerians in the IDP camp.”
Authorities seized various items from the suspects, including:
NIN registration machines
Printing machines
Laminating machines
Computer tracking devices
A generator set
The fraudulent activities reportedly extended to border communities, allowing non-Nigerian citizens, particularly from the Niger Republic, to fraudulently obtain Nigerian NINs in exchange for money.
In response to the ongoing clean-up, President Tinubu has mandated that the NIMC database be refined to ensure it accurately reflects details of vulnerable Nigerians eligible for social interventions, such as:
Conditional cash transfers
Student loan disbursements
Government social investment programmes
A Presidency source who spoke on the development said, “It was the Minister of Interior that gave that briefing because, you know, NIMC is under him.
“The interior minister said NIMC is tidying up the database because they found over 6,000 people from Niger Republic who obtained NIN. But they have been wiped from the database.
“The humanitarian ministry needs the data for its social register to perform its function. Also, the education ministry needs that data for student loans. The President doesn’t want to disburse money to people they cannot identify. They (NIMC) are ensuring that they verify the data. They are also registering more Nigerians and fine-tuning the data. So, the President wants it done quickly.”
The source revealed that after the briefing, the President asked the national security adviser and the interior minister to join an existing panel overseeing the humanitarian ministry.
Recall that while announcing the suspension of the former Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Alleviation, Betta Edu, on January 7, 2024, Tinubu asked a panel headed by the Coordinating Minister of the Economy and Minister of Finance to, among other functions, “conduct a comprehensive diagnostic on the financial architecture and framework of the social investment programmes to conclusively reform the relevant institutions and programmes in a determined bid to eliminate all institutional frailties for the exclusive benefit of disadvantaged households and win back lost public confidence in the initiative.”
On January 12, the President suspended for six weeks all Social Investment Programmes administered by the National Social Investment Programme Agency, including the school feeding programme.
A day later, he approved the establishment of a Special Presidential Panel to be led by Wale Edun.
The SPP included the Coordinating Minister of the Economy and Minister of Finance as Chairman and Prof. Ali Pate, the Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, as a member.
Other members are the Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, Abubakar Bagudu; the Minister of Information and National Orientation, Muhammad Idris; Minister of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy, Bosun Tijjani; and the Minister of Youth, Ayodele Olawande.
The panel now includes the National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu; the Interior Minister, Tunji-Ojo; the Education Minister, Tunji Alausa; and the Humanitarian Affairs Minister, Dr Nentawe Yilwatda.