While obtaining a Computerised National Identity Card (CNIC) is a fundamental requirement for accessing banking, education, employment, and voting rights in Pakistan, its timely cancellation after death holds equal significance. Many families across the country remain unaware of this necessity or avoid the process due to perceived costs, leading to inactive but valid CNICs of deceased individuals. This oversight often results in legal complications surrounding inheritance, pensions, and other transactions that rely on accurate family records. Recognizing this issue, NADRA has implemented reforms aimed at simplifying and digitizing the process, allowing families to cancel CNICs after death without any charges.
Under the new system, once a death is registered in the Civil Registration Management System (CRMS), NADRA automatically updates the corresponding family record. When relatives approach NADRA for any service, officials prompt them to verify the death through biometric confirmation, ensuring the accuracy of data before a CNIC is officially cancelled. This digital verification process has become vital, as some provincial systems are still in transition toward biometric integration. The policy, introduced under the directives of the interior minister, removes financial barriers that previously discouraged many families from initiating the process. By making CNIC cancellation free of cost, NADRA aims to foster transparency and maintain a clean, reliable citizen database.
The impact of these reforms has already been visible. Officials report that CNIC cancellations after death have increased nearly sixfold, strengthening record accuracy and significantly reducing the number of fraudulent or duplicate entries. For citizens like Bilal Ahmed from Rawalpindi, this change has brought welcome relief. He said that people earlier avoided the process because of the fees involved, but now families can complete it easily without administrative hurdles. Local leaders, such as village headman Ghulam Ali Dhaddi from Sargodha, have also emphasized the importance of linking NADRA’s verified data with other government departments, such as property and tax authorities, to automatically update inheritance and ownership records. Such integration would reduce the burden on uneducated or low-income families who struggle to navigate multiple government offices after the loss of a loved one.
Legal experts have endorsed NADRA’s move as a crucial step toward data reliability and effective governance. Advocate Usman Farooq Dhaddi explained that accurate death registration not only prevents legal disputes but also enables the government to plan more effectively for resource distribution, social welfare, and workforce management. However, some citizens feel there is room for further improvement. Karachi resident Sidra shared that while the free cancellation is a welcome step, integrating it with automatic property and inheritance updates would empower daughters and widows to claim their rightful shares more efficiently. For families like that of Rawalpindi’s Bakht Bibi, the reform brings a sense of dignity and inclusion. After years of neglect, her late husband’s CNIC is now properly marked in NADRA’s records — a small but meaningful acknowledgment that even Pakistan’s most marginalized citizens are counted and respected in the national database.
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