Monday 9 September 2013

To Tackle Insecurity, Police Introduces New Vehicle Registration System

IG of Police, Mohammed Abubakar 

As part of efforts at repositioning the Nigeria Police Force, NPF, against the present state of insecurity in the country, a new vehicle registration system would be introduced effective fromMonday, September 16 to replaced the current analogue one. 

The new method is expected to cover all vehicles including tricycles, motorcycles, cars, trucks among others. "It would replaced the old analogue CMR to the new Digital Biometric Central Motor Registration (BCMR) system."

Frank Mbah, the Force Public Relations Officer, FPRO, in a statement yesterday stressed that, the decision for the introduction of BCMR was against the backdrop of contemporary security challenges bordering on terrorism, high incidence of car theft, carjacking, kidnappings and other acts of crimes and criminalities in our society. 

"Unlike our hitherto analogue based procedures, the BCMR operates on smart-cards and portable hand-held receiver and is a specially developed technological means of attaching automobile owner’s unique traits and personal data  to their vehicles for proper identification and protection purposes."
 
The FPRO said that the Police BCMR is designed to be used for forensic analysis.  Fingerprints can be matched or verified against registered finger prints collected during registration.  It is designed to match 20 million fingerprints per seconds (the speed depends on the size of registered prints) 20 million fingerprints is equivalent to 2 million people (10 prints per person).  Facial Matching can also be achieved with Police BCMR; our database can be matched with still pictures and frames from a video stream.  The system can match 500,000 pictures per minute (if you have a registered database of 150 million, the likely match time for facial recognition is about 300 minutes (5hrs).
 
"As a huge store of information, the BCMR will provide a one-stop information data base for all vehicle owners and serve as a strong forensic base for all manners of investigations which will greatly enhance policing operations particularly in the area of tracking down and locating positions of missing vehicles, preventing crimes, arresting criminals guaranteeing safer and a more secure use of our roads and other sundry crimes."
 
 
Mbah said BCMR has three means of registration which could be either through designated Banks, on-line or at some Police Commands. In the case of the Banks, car owners pay the registration fees at the Banks, collect their pin numbers and proceed to the registration points for their registration a process that does not take more than ten minutes.

"You can also pay on-line, get your registration pin, commence the pre-registration by yourself, filling the details of your vehicle and personal data but the registrant would still have to get a designated registration to complete the registration process where his bio-data, photo and fingerprints would be captured. In the Police Commands and other designated formations, registrants would purchase a scratch card which would give pins to be used for registration. Vehicle owners are expected to pay N3,500.00, while tricycles popularly called “Keke Marwa” or “keke Napep” and auto-bikes go for N1,500.00."

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