Title: HANIS PROJECT OVERVIEW
1HANIS PROJECT OVERVIEW
DEPARTMENT OF HOME AFFAIRS
2FROM BIRTH TO DEATH
- Home Affairs keeps RECORDS of South African
citizens from the cradle to the grave. - Government departments and private sector
organisations make extensive use of the ID
number. - Home Affairs plays a pivotal role in identity
verification of citizens both for the public and
private sectors.
3REASONS FOR CONSIDERING A NEW IDENTIFICATION
SYSTEM
- Present document is abused (fraud).
- It is easily forged.
- Manufacture is time consuming.
- To produce it a variety of materials are used.
- By many it is no longer regarded as absolute
proof of identity. - Thus, a new national ID system had to be
considered, namely HANIS.
4REASONS FOR CONSIDERING A NEW IDENTIFICATION
SYSTEM
- Over the years there have been various approaches
to the verification of identity - Something you owned (royal seal, ID document).
- Something you knew (PIN, password).
- Something inherent to you (fingerprint, iris
print, voice print). - There have also been combinations (card PIN).
5WHAT IS HANIS?
- HANIS stands for Home Affairs National
Identification System. - A basic national identification system normally
consists of - - A Population Register,
- - A means by which individuals can be
- identified and verified,
- - An ID document.
- The components of a national ID system are
usually integrated into a single super system.
6ORIGINAL HANIS SYSTEM OBJECTIVES
- Issue an ID card to each and every South African.
- Ensure that only one ID is issued to each
individual (identification process). - Re-issue of lost ID cards.
- Hard copy identity verification, based on paper
request form. - Provide on-line and off-line identity
verification, for the public and private sectors.
7IN SOUTH AFRICA
- A Population Register already existed.
- A biometric, namely fingerprints, has been
adopted as a means whereby individuals can be
identified. In the HANIS the same biometric is
used to verify the identity of a person. This
portion of the HANIS is known as the Automated
Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS). - It has been decided that what is known as a smart
card will be used as the ID document of choice
(often also referred to as a Secure Electronic
National Identity Card SENIC).
8HANIS BACKGROUND
- Planning for a new identification system started
in the early 90s of the previous century. - The HANIS project started in 1996 with the
release of a tender for an automated fingerprint
system (AFIS), a two dimensional barcode ID card
and system integration. - Tender was awarded in January 1999.
- In 2000, HANIS implementation was officially
launched. - Shortly after, the card portion was removed from
the contract, pending an investigation into smart
card technology. The AFIS portion of the
contract continued.
9HANIS BACKGROUND (TENDER PROCESS DETAILS Slide
1)
- Tender published 6 December 1996.
- Tender closed 20 March 1997.
- Thirteen (13) tenders were received and after
detailed evaluation, 5 were short listed, with
approval of STB. As a result of December 1997
recess and some companies being foreign, this
process could only be concluded in January 1998. - The 5 were then allowed to further present on
their proposals and questions were posed by
officials as part of a second round of evaluation.
10HANIS BACKGROUND (TENDER PROCESS DETAILS Slide
2)
- From the 5 a final short list of 2 consortiums
were drawn up. - On 31 March 1998 officials departed on a 2 month
bench marking trip. - On their return, bench mark results were
extensively evaluated and a recommendation made
to STB. - STB awarded the contract to Marpless in January
1999 and work immediately commenced. - Final negotiated contract was signed in November
1999.
11HANIS BACKGROUND cont.
- Investigation into smart card technology has
included technical visits to a number of
countries (Malaysia, Finland, France, Belgium,
Germany), where this technology is used and
similar projects have been undertaken. - Investigation also included an RFI, released in
2000. - Findings were forwarded to Cabinet, recommending
approval of the smart ID card component of the
HANIS project, based on extended objectives for
HANIS.
12EXTENDED HANIS OBJECTIVES
- The extended HANIS objectives were
- To provide a smart card technology base for use
by various government departments. - To use this standardised smart card platform to
provide government services. - To ensure the ability to add new government
services after issue of the smart ID card
(without re-issue of the card). - To integrate a payment application for the
payment of state pensioners and beneficiaries in
conjunction with the Department of Social
Development, as well as the integration of
additional applications, as required by the
respective departments.
13CABINET MEMORANDUM APPROVAL
- The cabinet approved, in principle, on the 25th
of July 2001 - Implementation of a national smart ID card
project for the country. - A new national smart ID card as the platform for
integration of relevant government services
centered around electronic identification of
citizens to ensure interoperability, common
standards and the elimination of duplication. - Integration of the Department of Social
Developments state pension payment application
as the first additional application on the smart
ID card.
14HANIS BACKGROUND CONT.
- The Haysom Commission was set up in 2001 to
advise the Minister on the smart ID card project. - The then Department of Arts, Culture, Science and
Technology (DACST) was involved in discussions on
the project. - Various other inputs were considered.
- This resulted in a joint Cabinet Memorandum.
15JOINT CABINET MEMO
- Requested approval for
- Funding for the smart ID card project.
- Public tender procurement.
- Tender be broken into three separate tenders
- Main tender (card)
- Personalisation centre
- Terminals
- Future addition of other departments
applications.
16PUBLIC PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP (PPP)
- Cabinet referred the memorandum to National
Treasury for advice. - National Treasury suggested to the Department
that a comprehensive HANIS PPP study should be
done to enable them to advise Cabinet and made
available R15 million for the study (2003/04).
17PROGRESS ON HANIS
- POPULATION REGISTER
- Fully operational (but very old)
- AFIS
- Basic system commissioned on 18 February 2002.
- Basic system operational on 27 August 2002.
- Approximately 600 000 records have been captured
on the ID card application database. - Approximately 38 000 on the case files database.
- An average of 6 000 records added per day.
18ISSUES REQUIRING ATTENTION
- No new ID document (card) yet.
- Sparsely populated AFIS database.
- Daily capturing rate for AFIS database too low.
- Concrete system value from AFIS yet to be seen.
- Serious staff shortages due to resignations.
19SHORT TERM STRATEGY (TO ADDRESS ISSUES)
- To populate the AFIS database faster, the
Department intends to undertake an intelligent
Back Record Conversion process. - This process consists of capturing existing
manual records onto the database. - A system is being developed to provide remote
on-line identity verification services for the
public and private sectors. - It is envisaged that a Call Centre will be
established in association with the remote
verification service.
20SHORTER TERM STRATEGY (TO ADDRESS ISSUES) -
CONTINUED
WAYS AND MEANS MUST BE FOUND TO SHORTEN THE TIME
LINE FOR THE PPP PROCESS!
21PPP PROCESS TIME LINE
22FINANCIAL HISTORY OF HANIS
- Contracted amount R930.248 million, signed in
November 1999. - Initial contracted amount has been affected by
removal of card component, CPI and FOREX
Estimated total cost now R1.455 billion. - As of February 2003, approximately R 807 million
has been spent - 86 of amount on equipment,
- 13 on services,
- 1 on personnel, administration and inventories.
23ID CARD PROJECT PROGRESS
- Cabinet approved the use of the smart ID card as
a platform for integration of government services
in July 2001. - Agreement was obtained from industry on standards
regarding the smart ID card and fingerprint
format (workshop agreements EMV level 1 and 2
with the banks, ARP054 drafted by SABS). - A supplementary RFI was released to industry on
19 August 2002 with a closing date of 6 September
2002. - At present PPP process.
24SMART ID CARD PROJECT MANAGEMENT STRUCTURE
- Steering committee consisting of
director-generals from different departments.
This committee meets when required to discuss
management and strategy issues regarding the
smart ID card project. - Interdepartmental technical committee (IDTC)
consists of representatives of different
departments that discuss technical and
integration issues around the smart ID card
project on a monthly basis. - Separate ongoing meetings take place between Home
Affairs and other departments (to identify their
requirements for the smart ID card), as well as
Treasury.
25SMART ID CARD SOME AIMS
- The issue of a Smart ID Card to all eligible
South African citizens. - Estimated number 30 Million.
- Life span of the ID card approx. 10 years.
- Payment application on the Smart ID Card from
start. - Integration of government services.
26CURRENT TRUTHS
- ID card forms integral part of HANIS.
- The current ID book remains the target of fraud
as it is easily forged. - ID card information created through AFIS is
backed up in storage and is becoming outdated by
the day. - It is imperative that an ID card be issued in the
shortest possible time without overlooking the
financial implications and other important
factors.
27ESTIMATED SMART ID CARD TOTAL COST
DESCRIPTION OF PROJECT ITEM GROSS COST (R millions)
Smart ID cards (30 million over 5 years) 1710,0
Infrastructure costs (for 10 years) 100,0
Personalisation Centre 50,0
General project costs 25,4
TOTAL COST 1885,4
Estimated at R56 per card
TVE/19.08.02
28CONCLUSION
- The approach suggested for the smart card
- The ID card is the end product of the HANIS
vision. - THINK BIG, START SMALL, SCALE FAST
- From eGovernment Leadership Realizing the
Vision (Accenture, 2002)