Electronic ID cards “a greater tool to manage presence of foreigners” – Jagdeo
Within a year, the Guyana Government will be introducing its Single Electronic Identification System, which, Vice President Bharrat Jagdeo on Thursday said would be issued to foreigners in the country, enabling easier identification and tracking.
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The new ID card, which will also be issued to every Guyanese, will be an electronic identification card equipped with biometrics.
“Everyone else who is not Guyanese will have to have a residency card with the same security features with their biometrics too,” he said, noting that the cards would be differentiated by colour for citizens and foreigners.
Without their IDs, foreign residents will be prohibited from opening a bank account and obtaining employment, since employers will be required to ensure they are in possession of this new document.
The Government of Guyana in 2023 signed a US$35.4 million contract with Germany-based company Veridos Identity Solutions for the implementation of the national electronic ID.
Jagdeo said that with this new ID card, “at any given moment, we will know of all of the people who are in our country who are not Guyanese, and wherever they’re from. We will have their biometrics too so when we put in the 3000-4000 security cameras around the country, we will be able to tell you exactly where they are.”
He was at the time commenting on the influx of Venezuelan migrants into the country, noting that for far too long, it has being peddled that the Government was unaware of the magnitude of the presence of Venezuelans in Guyana and the potential security threats this posed.
“We are taking this threat seriously,” he noted.
Further, noting that not every detail of what is being done to safeguard the country’s borders could be disclosed, the VP echoed the sentiments of the Chief of Defence Staff of the Guyana Defence Force (GDF), Brigadier Omar Khan, that a humanitarian approach was also needed.
“I can assure you that this is being done, and we take the presence of the migrants in Guyana seriously; but we also want to be compassionate too, because, at various times in our history, our people sought economic refuge in Venezuela and Suriname,” he explained.
Jagdeo added that “what we are doing now with the national ID cards will give us a greater tool to manage the presence of foreigners in our country in a very clear and methodical way”.
He also explained that while some people would be singled-out for looking Venezuelan, they may have Guyanese heritage. According to the Constitution of Guyana, these persons can be given citizenship based on their parents or grandparents being Guyanese.