Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw
Owusu
Friday, June 16,
2017
The Minister of Transport, Kwaku Ofori
Asiamah, has stopped the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Authority (DVLA) from
going ahead with the issuance of new driver’s licence to the public.
The DVLA announced recently that from
July 18, 2017, it was going to commence the issuance of biometric driver’s
licence (popularly called Smart Driver’s Licence and Vehicle Registration Cards)
at additional fees, but Mr Asiamah has asked the Authority to put the project
on hold until further consultations.
A letter signed by the minister asking
the DVLA to suspend the project has been copied to Vice President Dr. Mahamudu
Bawumia; the Chief of Staff, Akosua Frema Osei-Opare and Senior Minister, Yaw
Osafo-Maafo.
“There have been recent publications
in the media about the launch of Smart Driver Licence and Vehicle Registration
Cards by the authority and which has raised some public concerns,” the minister
said in the letter.
“I wish also to refer you to the
discussion I had with you on the subject for which I drew your attention to the
need to obtain approval from the ministry and cabinet before the implementation
of such major project,” the letter stated.
The minister requested the DVLA to
submit to the ministry a memorandum on the project “to enable me to undertake
some consultations and seek the necessary approval from cabinet,” adding, “Meanwhile,
you are directed to suspend these projects with immediate effect until the
necessary approval has been sought.”
The new DVLA Chief Cxecutive, Kwasi
Agyeman Busia, recently told the media that the Smart Drivers License and
Vehicle Registration Cards were expected to be issued within a period of one
month and was aimed at flushing out fake licences from the system and do away
with middlemen popularly known as ‘goro boys.’
He said that the new licence – which
was to have come in the form of a smart card - would contain a chip loaded with
the owner’s biometric data.
“This will ensure that people who have
made duplication an industry will have it extra difficult to duplicate the
licence. It will be practically impossible, as it will have enhanced security,”
Mr Agyeman Busia was quoted as saying.
“It will also help us manage the
revenue that will come to the authority because duplication is causing a lot of
revenue leakage, particularly in the driving licence area. Driving licences
have become the standard of our authority. We want to make sure this is
protected,” he added.
However, the announcement was greeted
with uproar, with the public asking for education while others believed that it
was not necessary since the current licence was introduced not too long ago.
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