Africa’s richest man employs iris technology to check attendance of over 30,000 employees
Africa’s richest man Aliko Dangote has employed iris technology to check
the time and attendance of over 30,000 cement division employees at his
Dangote Cement factories in five countries in the continent.
One of the largest industrial conglomerates in Africa, the Dangote Group
chose iris recognition to enrol and authenticate employees in Nigeria,
Ethiopia, Senegal, Sierra Leone and Congo.
According to Group Chief Information Officer, Prasanna Kumar Burri, the
conglomerate had challenges using traditional time clocks and
fingerprint ID systems that were slow and not accurate. They later chose
the iris recognition biometric solution and installed the first system
at the Dangote cement plant in Ethiopia in 2018.
“Anytime an employee moves in and out of the work site, he has to use the iris ID system. So it’s not just the clock-in and the last strikeout. So anytime an employee moves from the access gate, they need to authenticate themselves. Anytime an employee can walk up to the iris ID terminal and just stay a few seconds, the authentication is done. It’s very fast,” he explained to Iris ID.
Dangote uses turnstiles in employee entries and each turnstile includes iris readers. A quick glance at the reader is all it takes to authenticate employees. This cuts back long lines and is contactless therefore prevents passing bacteria or viruses. The technology uses a person’s iris, the coloured part of the eye surrounding the pupil.
Dangote uses turnstiles in employee entries and each turnstile includes iris readers. A quick glance at the reader is all it takes to authenticate employees. This cuts back long lines and is contactless therefore prevents passing bacteria or viruses. The technology uses a person’s iris, the coloured part of the eye surrounding the pupil.
Burri said the iris ID software has been seamlessly integrated with
Dangote’s payment software and it can be used across multiple locations.
The system can hold up to a million transaction on each unit with a
reduced cost resulting from less time spent, reports Iris ID.
The iris recognition system made a major entry into the continent in
2017 when Somaliland became the first country in the world to use the
iris recognition-based biometric voting system. Eyes of registered
voters were scanned to verify their identity before they were cleared to
vote.
The machines had been under trial since 2015 before the election held
on November 13, 2017. It was successful and they made history.
They eliminated the problem of double voting which is faced by most
countries including Ghana, Kenya and Angola who use the fingerprint
biometric voting system to identify registered voters.
The disadvantage is mostly technical including the breakdown of
machines and the running down of batteries which sometimes slows the
process. These problems did not affect the elections in any way.
Credit: Face2faceafrica
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