Thursday, 17 April 2025

The Chronicles of Paperless Policy: Nigeria’s Love Affair with Paper


In a country where fintech apps flourish and QR codes are as common as traffic jams, Nigeria remains curiously devoted to paper. It’s as if we’re in a romantic entanglement with ink and pulp, unwilling to let go of the relics of colonial administration. Forget the marvels of blockchain and the promises of digital transformation; in Nigeria, no transaction is complete until paper is ceremoniously exchanged, stamped, or bundled. Let us explore this paradox of a people so advanced yet hopelessly anchored to the past.



Paper Trails in Governance and Everyday Life



Visit any government office in Nigeria, and you’ll witness the sacred ritual of files journeying from one desk to another. A simple request might require signatures from a dozen officials, each carefully inscribing their mark of approval. One would think this practice is about accountability, but in truth, it’s an economic system of its own. The true beneficiaries? The unseen network of printer dealers, paper suppliers, and photocopy repair technicians thriving on yearly allocations for office stationery.


This isn’t inefficiency; it’s an institution. Think of the symbolic power of a physical document in Nigeria , thick files stacked high on desks are not just records; they are monuments to bureaucracy itself. As for corruption, well, the “paper culture” ensures money can change hands discreetly “processing fees” for printing or photocopying documents you don’t even need.


Private organizations are no better. Lawyers, for instance, are notorious for their excessive reverence for hard copies. You might receive a beautifully drafted email, but it will often end with a promise that the hard copy is on its way. Why? Perhaps the ink on paper carries some mystic authority that a PDF cannot convey. Even digital contracts often have to be printed, signed with ceremonial grandeur, and then scanned back into the digital realm—truly the circle of life for Nigerian documents.


The practice extends to all sectors. Online forms must be printed for submission; e-receipts are often only valid if you can produce a hard copy. Meanwhile, budgets for office supplies continue to balloon. Could it be that someone, somewhere, is profiting immensely from this paper addiction? The cynic in me says yes.



Law Enforcement: Guardians of the Paper Order



“Show me your particulars!” It’s a phrase as Nigerian as suya on a Friday night, yet equally baffling. The Nigerian police and Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) are armed with smartphones and tablets, yet they still demand physical copies of your vehicle documents. Presenting a digital version stored on your phone? That’s an insult to their authority, or perhaps their tradition.


And why shouldn’t they insist on printed documents? Someone is undoubtedly making a fortune from the continuous production of vehicle licenses, insurance papers, and roadworthiness certificates. After all, why build a centralized, accessible webpage to display vehicle particulars when we can churn out millions of sheets annually? It’s not as though these officers lack the technology to verify documents, they have smartphones in hand, often scrolling through social media while waiting for you to retrieve your paper trove.



Judiciary and the Records of Appeal



Our legal system is another stronghold of paper worship. Despite numerous rules of court now permitting electronic records, the judiciary remains a staunch defender of the paper fortress. Records of appeal come in bundles so thick they could double as building materials. Lawyers and litigants spend fortunes obtaining certified true copies of judgments and filings already accessible online.


This adherence to paper isn’t just anachronistic; it’s costly and time-consuming. While the judiciary takes tentative steps toward digitalization, it’s clear that paper still reigns supreme in the courtrooms, where the rustle of pages rivals the solemnity of proceedings.



Everyday Ironies



Nigerians have embraced technology with open arms in other aspects of life. Mobile banking is ubiquitous, barcodes are scanned at train stations, and even small vendors accept transfers via mobile apps. Yet, these advances coexist with an unyielding need for paper documentation.


Want to travel? Your ticket may be on your phone, but you’ll need a printed copy to clear your luggage. Applying for a visa? Fill out the forms online, but don’t forget to print every page and bring it to the embassy. Even institutions like the National Identity Management Commission, supposedly at the forefront of digitization, require you to print enrollment slips for verification. It’s a bizarre duality: we trust digital technology for personal transactions but demand paper for institutional processes.



The Way Forward



To be fair, not all of this reliance on paper is baseless. Infrastructural gaps, such as inconsistent internet access and unreliable mobile devices, make a fully paperless system impractical in certain parts of the country. But this cannot excuse the blatant hypocrisy of our current practices. If we can digitize banking, trade, and even social interactions, why can’t we digitize governance and law enforcement?


The way forward lies in embracing a hybrid system that prioritizes electronic records while reserving paper for absolute necessities. Digital platforms should be robust and widely accessible, with government agencies, law enforcement, and private organizations adopting secure, centralized systems to verify documents. More importantly, we must shed the cultural belief that only paper is credible.


Until then, Nigeria’s so-called paperless policy will remain a myth—a modern aspiration buried beneath piles of paper. Perhaps one day, we’ll print fewer documents and more progress.


The post above is purely satirical. All personal attacks are pun intended, sorry, not intended.