- Liberian authorities extends compulsory nationwide identification card registration by 76 days
- The choice adopted a chaotic rollout course of that sparked nationwide outrage
- The Nationwide Identification Registry says in the meanwhile, individuals are allowed to entry banking and different providers with out nationwide ID cards
MONROVIA, Liberia—The Liberian authorities has prolonged the deadline for obligatory registration of nationwide Identification Playing cards by 76 days. The transfer adopted a chaotic rollout course of that had sparked nationwide outrage. Lengthy queues, poor communication, and restricted infrastructure had triggered widespread frustration and repair denials for thousands and thousands.
The Nationwide Identification Registry mentioned residents and international residents alike had till August 31 to acquire their ID playing cards.
The federal government’s transfer adopted a FrontPage Africa/New Narratives article, during which residents voiced anger over the ineffectiveness of the method and mentioned they’d been denied of significant providers. At a new conference, Mr. Andrew Peters, govt director of the Registry, mentioned they took the residents’ considerations critically.
“We’ve got listened to the entire excuses from Liberians that they’re caught unaware,” mentioned Peters. “We’re providing you with a time-frame of two months, 15 days, the place mass deployment will happen.”

The nationwide ID system is significant to a rustic— largely tied to governance, safety, and growth. The Liberian authorities can also be making certain that it’s a serious requirement for banking and SIM card registration different important providers. It’s additionally meant to forestall electoral fraud and enhance governance in a rustic, the place solely 14 p.c of residents had registered for nationwide IDs earlier than President Joseph Boakai’s April 14 mandate.
Digital Entry, However Bodily Biometric Nonetheless Required
To quick monitor the registration course of, the Registry mentioned it might launch a web-based portal subsequent week, permitting candidates to use from wherever—doubtlessly lowering the crushing crowds at bodily facilities. However Peters admitted that on-line registration alone couldn’t take up all of the burdens related to the general registration course of.
“If you register, whenever you fill within the kind, that’s not the registration — you’ll bodily seem to defend the data you placed on the telephone,” mentioned Peters in a separate interview with FPA/NN by telephone. “You’ve obtained to seem so you are able to do your biometric.”
Peters mentioned as a part of the brand new plans, the variety of enrollment facilities in Montserrado County will enhance from 14 to 164, with 500 new enrollment kits deployed.
“You may see the enrollment circumstances which might be right here,” mentioned Peters on the press convention. “We’ve obtained smartphones, we’ve obtained tablets, and our individuals are ready to proceed.”
Peters mentioned they will deploy groups throughout all of Liberia’s 15 counties. He mentioned greater than 3,000 short-term jobs for younger Liberians may also be created because of the extension.
Residents Welcome Adjustments, Increase Issues
The extension might have helped to calm any rigidity surrounding the registration course of, however there are nonetheless considerations that some individuals could also be excluded from it. Oscar Koung, a Liberian citizen, mentioned though he supported the safety advantages of the ID system, he was frightened a couple of potential exclusion of uneducated individuals from the net system.
“A few of them don’t know how one can communicate English,” mentioned Koung. “The net registration, for me, it’s good. And it’s good for individuals who can learn and write.”
Yekehson Roosevelt Nelson, who spent cash to safe a spot in line on the places of work of the Registry, mentioned he was skeptical the system would enhance.
“As you’ll be able to see, it’s not higher,” mentioned Nelson on the Registery in Congo City. He paid L$1,500 to a queue-jumper, which he mentioned demonstrated a persistent casual charge fee. “They should enhance it.”
Civil Society Cautiously Optimistic
Earlier than the extension, main civil society leaders, together with Mr. Harold Aidoo, govt director of Integrity Watch Liberia, had criticized the lack of know-how over the method.
In an FPA/NN interview by telephone after the extension was introduced, Aidoo praised the federal government’s swift response to the considerations that had been developed from the train.
However he mentioned a stronger oversight of the method was necessary “to ensure that there’s coherence, there’s stringent monitoring.”
“The worry has at all times been that the second you start to decentralize, you decentralize not simply the nice, however you additionally decentralize the rot,” Aidoo mentioned, referring to considerations of potential corruption from the method.

Hyperlink to Elections and Nationwide Providers
As a part of a broader push to increase the registration course of, Peters mentioned there have been plans to additionally hyperlink it to nationwide election administration. This technique has largely labored in some African international locations, together with Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana and Sierra Leone, one among Liberia’s neighbors, which has achieved a 95 p.c protection of that. Within the press convention, Peters confirmed plans to signal an MoU with the Nationwide Elections Fee this week,
making the ID system integral to future voter verification. He mentioned it would assist to forestall any potential electoral fraud.
“On the 2023 elections, you noticed what occurred,” Peters mentioned, referring to allegations of vote-buying and candidate residency disputes. “This course of will cease that.”
However observers say the approaching weeks will take a look at whether or not Liberia can notice its digital governance ambitions—or fall again into bureaucratic exclusion and inefficiency.
This story was a collaboration with New Narratives as a part of the Investigating Liberia venture. Funding was offered by the Swedish Embassy in Liberia. The funder had no say within the story’s content material.