It doesn’t appear to involve the biometric IDs that were first proposed by NATO, but the Afghanistan government has just announced plans to issue electronic ID cards to everyone in the country — an undertaking that it hopes will be complete in five years. That admittedly difficult effort got off to an official start today with the signing of a $101 .5 million contract with Afghan company Grand Technology Resources, which will apparently be responsible for producing the wallet-sized cards themselves. In addition to the usual identification, those will each contain a chip that stores the individual’s drivers license, vehicle registration, signature and voting registration records — the latter of which is particularly key, as one of the main reasons for the cards existence is to ensure ” fairer, more transparent and efficient” elections in the future. Afghanistan moves ahead with plans for national electronic ID cards originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Dec 2010 18:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink