National Population Commission


National Population Commission is the principal data mining commission of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, responsible for collecting, collating, analysing and publishing data about the Nigerian people and economy. The commission is under the supervision of the Office of the Presidency, and its head is appointed by the President of Nigeria.
The commission is currently headed by Hon. Nasir Isa Kwarra.

Organizational Structure

The Commission is composed of a policy-making body consisting of 37 Federal Commissioners who are organized into different Standing Committees. The Commission is led by a Chairman, while the administrative head is the Director-General. Departments within the Commission include Cartography, Census, Finance & Accounts, Human Resources and Administration, ICT, Audit, Population Management and Development, Planning and Research, Population Studies, Public Affairs, Procurement, Special Duties, Vital Registration, and Legal Services, General Services.
The State offices are headed by the State Directors who are the administrative heads. Departments in the states are: Technical Unit, Vital Registration, Human Resource, and Management and Public Affairs.
At the Local Government Area level, Comptrollers serve as liaisons between the office, traditional institutions, and local government authorities. The Commission's Secretariat and Internal Audit are both under the office of the Chairman.

Substantive Chairmen of National Population Commission

Below is a list of substantive chairmen of the National Population Commission of Nigeria.
S/NONameStateTenure
1Ademola AdetokunboOgun1973 - 1979
2Alh. Abdulrahman OkeneKogi1980 - 1983
3Alh. Shehu Musa Niger1988 - 1992
4Lt. Col. Chris Ugokwe Anambra1992 - 2000
5Chief Samu'ila Danko MakamaPlateau2001 - 2012
6Mr. Eze Festus Odimegwu, CONImo2012 - 2013
7Mr. Eze Duruiheoma, SANImo2014 - 2019
8Hon. Nasir Isa KwarraNasarawa2020 - date

List of Federal Commissioners

Below is a list of all the present 37 federal commissioners who make up the policy-making body of the National Population Commission.
S/NONameState
1Hon. Emmanuel Trump EkeAbia
2Dr. Clifford T.O ZirraAdamawa
3Engr. Bennedict Ukpong, FNSEAkwa Ibom
4Mr. Chidi Christopher Ezeoke, mniAnambra
5Hon. Ibrahim MohammedBauchi
6Mrs. Gloria Izonfuo, mniBayelsa
7Barr. Patricia Iyanya KupchiBenue
8Barr. Isah Audu BurataiBorno
9Bishop Alex UkamCross River
10Mrs Blesing Brume-AtagubaDelta
11Dr. Jeremiah Ogbonna NwankwaguEbonyi
12Dr. Tony AiyejinaEdo
13Hon. Ayodeji AjayiEkiti
14Hon. Ejike EzeEnugu
15Hon. Joseph K. ShazinFCT
16Hon. Abubakar Mohammed DanburamGombe
17Prof. Uba NnabueImo
18Garba A. G. ZakarJigawa
19Mrs Saadatu Garba DogonbauchiKaduna
20Dr. Aminu Ibrahim TsanyawaKano
21Hon. Bala Almu BanyeKatsina
22Dr. Haliru BalaKebbi
23Hon. Yori AfolabiKogi
24Razaq Folorunsho GidadoKwara
25Barr. Mrs. Saidat Olayinka OladunjoyeLagos
26Nassarawa
27Mohammed Dattijo UsmanNiger
28Otunba Fasuwa Abayomi JohnsonOgun
29--
30Dr. Tadese AmiduOsun
31Dr. Eyitayo OyetunjiOyo
32Mrs. Mary Ishaya Afan, mniPlateau
33Prof. Itotenaan Henry OgiriRivers
34Hon. Chiso DattijoSokoto
35Mr. Sale Sule SaanyTaraba
36Yobe
37Hon. Mohammad Muttaka RiniZamfara

History

The National Population Commission is a Nigerian government agency established by Section 140 of the 1979 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. However, it was suspended on 31 December 1983, following a military takeover of the democratically elected government of Nigeria. The commission was re-established by the National Population Commission Decree No. 23 of 1989, which is now known as the National Population Act, CAP – No_67, Law of the Federal Government of Nigeria 2004. The 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, under section 153 and part of of the third Schedule to the Constitution, and Births, Deaths, etc. Act, CAP B9, LFN 2004.
The Commission has the statutory powers to collect, analyse and disseminate population and demographic data in the country. It is also mandated to undertake demographic sample surveys, compile, collate and publish migration and civil registration statistics as well as monitor the country's population policy.
Prior to 1979, the Commission was known as the National Census Board, and conducted the 1973 Census. It was headed by Justice Adetokunbo Ademola. It was a temporal body which was later transformed into the National Population Bureau. In 1981, President Shehu Shagari inaugurated Alhaji Abdulrahman Okene, as chairman of the commission, alongside 19 members representing each state of the federation.
When General Muhammadu Buhari overthrew the Shagari presidency on 31 December 1983, the constitution was suspended and the commission was dissolved. The commission reverted to the status of a Bureau, and was headed by a civil servant on the rank of director.
In 1988, Alhaji Shehu Musa, Makaman Nupe was appointed by General Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida, as chairman of the commission alongside six members. The commission was legalized with Decree No 43 of 1989. This commission conducted the 1991 census.
Empowered by the 1999 Constitution, in October 2001, the Olusegun Obasanjo administration inaugurated Chief Samu’ila Danko Makama as chairman of the Commission alongside 37 members representing each state in Nigeria and the FCT.
In June 2012 Chief Eze Festus Odimegwu was inaugurated as chairman of the commission alongside 37 members, one each from the 36 states of Nigeria, and one representing the Federal Capital Territory. Odimegwu resigned in October 2013. In February 2014, Eze Duruiheoma, SAN was appointed Chairman of the commission.
On 15 October 2020, the Senate of Nigeria confirmed the appointment of Nasir Isa Kwarra as the chairman and eleven commissioners for the Commission.

Population Census in Nigeria

With the census Ordinance of 1863, the first population census in the Nigeria area was conducted in 1866. Subsequent ones were held in 1871, 1881, 1891 and 1901. These counts were all confined to the Lagos Colony and its environs, and marked the sequential beginning of the British decennial census tradition in Nigeria.
The 1911 census covered the entire Southern Protectorate. However, the enumeration was not total because some areas had not yet accepted the authority of the colonial government.
The amalgamation of the Southern and Northern protectorates in 1914 by Lord Lugard widened the census coverage in Nigeria. Like in previous censuses, the results of the 1921 population estimates were based on tax records, and people who had not filed a tax return were not counted. In the Northern region, the population estimates were based on vital statistics.
The Women's War of 1929 in Calabar and Owerri provinces in the Eastern region prevented the enumeration of major municipalities in these areas in 1931. Similarly, some areas in the Northern provinces were not counted as some census staff were re-posted to anti-locust duties as a result of the raging locust invasion in some parts of the North.
The outbreak of the Second World War broke the sequential chain of the decennial counts as no population count was conducted in 1941. The 1952/1953 Population Census was marred by gross under-enumeration as people were suspicious of the motives of the exercise having been broken by the Second World War.
The 1962 population census was simultaneously held across the nation. The census was highly politicized. All the regional governments rejected the results. This led to a rerun in 1963 which was still contested at the Supreme Court, where the court declined jurisdiction over administrative functions of government.
The census of 1973 was also not gazetted for reasons of falsification of figures for political and ethnic advantages. The 1991 Census employed the principle of simultaneity. It was scientifically conducted, accepted, and gazetted. The first population and housing census held in 2006. It employed the use of GPS and satellite imagery to mark-out Geo-referenced enumeration areas.

Population policies in Nigeria

Rising poverty and crime rate necessitated Nigeria's first population policy in the 1980s. Hence, the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Development Plans included poverty elimination.
The first National Population Policy, enacted in 1988, was aimed at changing Nigerians' reproductive habits. It aimed to protect the health of both mother and child by reducing the proportion of women marrying before the age of 18 by 50% by 1995 and 80% by 2000; extending family planning services to 50% of women of childbearing age by 1995 and 80% by 2000; reducing the number of births per woman to four; and reducing the number of births to four per woman.
In 2004 the government launched a Revised National Population Policy. The policy's specific targets include: "reducing National population growth rate to 2% or lower by the year 2015; reducing total fertility rate of at least 0.6 children every five years; increasing the modern contraceptive prevalence rate by at least 2% per year; reducing infant mortality rate to 35 per 1,000 live births by 2015; reducing child mortality rate to 45 per 1,000 live births by 2015; reducing maternal mortality to 125 per 100,000 live births by 2010 and 75 by 2015; and achieving a 25 percent reduction in HIV adult prevalence."