"We're putting out close to 8,000 cards per day. "It's a national ID and it's unique," said Fahmi, chief of the sub-directorate population administration, and head of the e-KTP Technical Team in the Ministry of Home Affairs in Indonesia, who gave a keynote presentation about the project Wednesday at the Biometric Consortium Conference in Tampa. According to Husni Fahmi, who heads up the e-KTP project in Indonesia, the hope is all will be in place before the next election in 2014. This electronic national identity card, called the e-KTP, is a government effort to get millions of citizens to enroll at registration centers where their fingerprint, iris and face are captured as images through biometric equipment and personal information stored as a record associated with each electronic identity card. Indonesia is spending $600 million on a project to give 172 million residents a national identity card that will be used for a wide range of purposes, including proving identity for voter registration, passport issuance, tax and financial matters, and much more. Other security news: Legal hurdles threaten to slow FBI's 'Rapid DNA' revolution Indonesia, a country that's basically an archipelago of more than 70,000 islands that has infrastructure issues in electricity and limited bandwidth, is rolling out the world's most ambitious biometrics-based national identity card project for its citizens.
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