Executive Summary
Ethiopia is rolling out a foundational national digital identity system called Fayda a unique 12-digit identifier plus verifiable credentials with the aim of enabling residents to access services, reducing identity-fraud, promoting financial inclusion and digital transformation.
The system has special importance for the Somali Region, where many people have limited official documentation, where pastoralist lifestyles and remote geography make service-delivery harder, and where inclusion via identity can help integrate marginalized populations into the national system.
What the Fayda ID Is
“Fayda” means “value” and the goal is to issue a unique 12-digit number to every resident citizen and legal resident in Ethiopia, linked to digital verification, biometrics (fingerprints, face) and other data. The system is managed by the National ID Program (NIDP) of Ethiopia, under the legal framework of the Digital Identification Proclamation No 1284/2023.
Key features include: a “one person, one identity” principle to avoid duplicates; a digital identity usable for online and offline authentication; interoperability across government, private sector services, and financial services. The system is part of the government’s “Digital Ethiopia 2025” strategy a push to build digital infrastructure across public services, financial inclusion, economy.
Operational Model & Rollout Status
Enrolment occurs via permanent registration centres and mobile units to reach remote areas. The project had issued millions of IDs and aims to reach tens of millions more e.g., one source cites a goal of 63 million by end of year, with ultimate target circa 90 million.
A mobile app for Fayda services ID number recovery, updates, verification has been launched to enhance access and convenience. The global development partner World Bank supports the initiative under the “Digital ID for Inclusion and Services” project, emphasizing inclusion, service access for refugees and host communities.
Why the Fayda ID Is Important
- Financial inclusion
People without formal ID often cannot open bank accounts, access mobile money, or get credit. Fayda serves as a standard, verifiable identity to reduce onboarding friction. - Efficient public service delivery
With services healthcare, education, social protection linked to a standard ID, duplication can be reduced, targeting improved, data-driven policy becomes possible. - Digital economy and governance
The ID underpins e-government, digital verification, and private-sector services. Strong identity systems are foundational for trustworthy digital transactions. - Inclusion of refugees and marginalized groups
The system explicitly envisions inclusion of refugees and displaced persons, thus reducing exclusion and improving legal recognition.
Why It Matters Especially for the Somali Region
The Somali Region has unique structural challenges and characteristics which make the national ID especially relevant.
Context of the Somali Region
The Somali Region is one of Ethiopia’s regional states, predominantly inhabited by ethnic Somalis, many of whom are Muslim, pastoralist or semi-pastoralist, and live in remote or arid zones. Historically, documentation, registration and service access have been weaker there: official identity documentation, birth registration and formal “kebele” identity cards may be inconsistent or harder to obtain.
Specific Benefits for the Somali Region
- Improved official documentation and identity recognition
Many residents may lack standard identity credentials. Fayda offers a nationally recognised identity credential, facilitating access to formal services, banking, mobile services, employment. - Access for mobile, pastoralist and remote populations
Given the mobile or pastoralist lifestyle in much of the region, mobile registration units or simplified enrolment are important. The national programme’s mobile units approach means fewer barriers for remote areas. - Reduced exclusion and increased inclusion of marginalised groups
The region has often been less served; a foundational ID system helps integrate citizens into national systems, strengthening inclusion, reducing inequalities. - Enablement of financial and digital services
With a verifiable ID, individuals in the Somali Region can more easily open bank accounts, get mobile money, access insurance, engage in formal commerce all of which have been constrained by identity deficiencies. - Support for refugees, returnees and cross-border populations
The Somali Region borders Somalia, hosts internally displaced persons and refugees, and has cross-border movements. The Fayda system’s inclusion of refugees and returnees means that host-community residents and displaced persons can be recognised, documented and enabled. - Strengthening of regional service delivery and governance
With a unified identity backbone, regional authorities in Somali Region can better plan, allocate resources, deliver social protection, education, health improving governance in a region that has often been underserved.
Some Challenges to Watch in the Somali Region
- Ensuring accessibility of enrolment: remote zones, pastoralist groups, low infrastructure roads, electricity may still pose barriers.
- Overcoming language, cultural and trust issues: Somali language, clan systems and local governance need culturally sensitive approaches for enrolment and outreach.
- Ensuring data protection, no discrimination or exclusion: Care must be taken that the identity system does not become a gatekeeper which unintentionally excludes people lacking previous documentation or living informally.
- Infrastructure and connectivity issues: Mobile units, biometric devices, connectivity may need extra investment to cover the region’s geography.
Governance, Safeguards and Good Practices
- The legal framework Proclamation No. 1284/2023 includes protections for personal data: for example, collecting only the necessary data, purpose limitation, collection of biometric data under consent.
- Transparency, public engagement and civil society oversight are critical to maintain trust, especially in regions where communities may feel marginalised.
- Inclusive enrolment strategies must purposely target remote, pastoral, minority-language areas such as many parts of the Somali Region.
- Privacy preserving verification and security measures: The system must ensure secure biometric storage, risk of identity theft or misuse must be mitigated.
- Clear mechanisms for appeals, corrections, updates: If individuals in the Somali Region move, or lack documentation, there must be accessible means for registration.
Short Recommendations with Somali Region Focus
- Accelerate mobile outreach in the Somali Region: deploy more mobile enrolment teams, emphasizing underserved zones, pastoralist communities, in Somali language, with clan engagement.
- Culturally-sensitive communication and trust-building: Use Somali-language materials, engage local elders/leadership, explain benefits in terms of local livelihoods e.g., livestock, trade, mobile money.
- Simplify enrolment requirements: ensure that lacking prior documentation birth certificate, kebele ID is not a block use local introducer schemes or verification approaches.
- Ensure integration with financial & telecom services: coordinate with banks, mobile operators in Somali Region so that the Fayda ID immediately yields tangible benefits mobile money, bank account, SIM registration for residents.
- Continuous monitoring and feedback: track registration rates, exclusion gaps, by zone in the Somali Region; adapt the outreach strategy if uptake lags.
- Maintain data protection and non-discrimination: Pay special attention to avoid clan-based exclusion or bias, or fear of surveillance ensure people understand their rights and grievance mechanisms.
Conclusion
The Fayda national digital ID system in Ethiopia is more than just another identity card: it is a foundational infrastructure for inclusion, service access, economic participation and governance. For the Somali Region, which has long faced barriers in documentation, service-access and inclusion.
Fayda offers a significant opportunity to bridge gaps provided the rollout is executed with sensitivity to the region’s unique context remote populations, pastoralism, language/culture, infrastructure. Its success will depend not just on technology but on inclusive design, outreach, governance and sustained investment in access and trust.
