Gambia’s Interior Minister Praises Margins ID Group’s capabilities during National ID project Visit

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Gambia’s Minister of Interior, Hon. Abdoulie Sanyang, has publicly commended the technological capabilities and professional expertise of Margins ID Group following a comprehensive two-day visit to the company’s advanced facilities in Ghana. The visit, which took place from February 2 to February 4, 2026, formed part of The Gambia’s ongoing effort to implement a modern, secure and fully integrated National Identification Project designed to serve the country’s long-term governance and digital transformation priorities.

Minister Sanyang led a high-level delegation that included senior officials from The Gambia’s Ministry of Interior, the Immigration Department, the Police Service and other key government agencies. The delegation also featured Permanent Secretary Matar Ceesay, reflecting the national importance that the Gambian government attaches to the digital identity initiative. The two-day programme involved in-depth tours of Margins ID Group’s technology and smart manufacturing facilities, where government representatives saw first-hand the company’s end-to-end capabilities across identity technology, software development, biometric enrolment and secure card production.

Margins ID Group, a Ghanaian-owned technology firm with more than three decades of experience in secure identity solutions, has been contracted by the Gambian government to design and implement a biometric national identification ecosystem tailored to The Gambia’s specific needs. The agreement, signed on January 19, 2026, marks one of the most significant Public–Private Partnership engagements in The Gambia’s digital infrastructure history, highlighting a commitment to Africa-led technological solutions.

During the visit, the Gambian delegation toured several subsidiaries of Margins ID Group, including Margins ID Systems Applications Limited (MIDSA) and Intelligent Card Production Systems (ICPS). These arms of the company work collectively to deliver secure identity platforms: MIDSA focuses on software and systems applications, while ICPS specialises in the production of highly secure identity cards and credentials. Delegates witnessed the company’s robust infrastructure, including biometric enrolment platforms, interoperable databases and secure production lines for smart identity cards — all geared toward building a resilient and scalable national ID system.

Hon. Abdoulie Sanyang praised Margins ID Group’s capabilities, noting the strength of its technical infrastructure and its potential to revolutionise identity management in The Gambia. He highlighted the company’s advanced verification systems and interoperable database solutions as key features that set Margins apart from other providers, and he underscored the government’s confidence in the sustainability of the identity ecosystem being developed for Gambian citizens. His remarks came amid growing enthusiasm within government circles for digital ID systems that enhance security, service delivery and citizen engagement.

For The Gambia, the introduction of a fully integrated national identification system represents a transformational shift. Previous attempts at establishing a comprehensive ID infrastructure had faced challenges including technical hurdles and organisational bottlenecks but the current partnership with Margins ID Group is expected to avoid past errors by leveraging world-class technology and robust implementation strategies. Officials have emphasised that the new system will serve as the foundational digital infrastructure for the country, supporting access to a wide range of public and private services, including healthcare, education, financial services and e-government platforms.

The national ID project also aligns with The Gambia’s broader Digital ID Transformation Strategy, which aims to provide all citizens with secure and verifiable digital identities while ensuring data security, interoperability across sectors and adherence to international best practices in privacy and protection. The strategy underscores the government’s commitment to using digital identification as a catalyst for inclusive development and improved public service delivery.

Gambia’s Minister of Interior, Hon. Abdoulie Sanyang with the Margins ID Group

From Margins ID Group’s perspective, the Gambian engagement reflects a growing trend of Africa-to-Africa technological collaboration. The company’s experience in delivering Ghana’s own national ID widely recognised as a high-quality and secure system provided a strong benchmark during the tendering process and helped position Margins as a trusted partner capable of delivering tailored identity solutions. The Gambia’s choice of Margins reinforces growing confidence among African governments in indigenous technology firms that can compete with global providers on both quality and reliability.

Margins ID Group’s CEO, Moses Kwesi Baiden Jnr., has described the Gambia contract as a defining moment for the company and for African innovation in national identity systems. The project not only showcases the technical prowess of Margins but also reflects an important shift toward continental ownership of critical digital infrastructure a trend closely aligned with broader African development agendas and technological self-reliance.

The delegation’s visit underscored mutual commitment to the project’s success and demonstrated high-level support for the initiative at the government level in both countries. For The Gambia, the partnership with Margins ID Group signals a new chapter in governance and data management one in which secure, efficient and interoperable identity solutions are central to national development and public service delivery.

Gambia

As implementation progresses, stakeholders in The Gambia and across the region will be watching closely to see how the project enhances not only national identification infrastructure but also the country’s capacity to participate fully in regional economic and digital frameworks.