Mr Kenneth Tawiah, Assistant Supervisor at the
Joe Mends "C" registration centre, called for special arrangements under which school children would not miss classes as a result of the National Identification registration exercise.
He said since the exercise began on July One, this year, the number of pupils that thronged the centre to register was so huge that they could not be catered for due to limited staff.
As a result, they spent the whole day there without attending classes, Mr Tawiah told the Ghana News Agency in an interview at the Centre.
Mr Tawiah said the two centres he supervised registered 100 people daily on average which demanded increase in "MCR Computers" used for the registration.
He said there was the need to train more competent operators to effectively operate the machines so as to reduce the long queue that was normally formed.
Mr Tawiah said nothing had been done to provide fuel for the seven generators at the 10 centres at Kasoa to help charge the batteries for the computers.
He said if swift action was not taken work would come to a standstill after eight hours.
Mr Tawiah appealed to the authorities to intensify the programme of educating foreigners not to provide wrong information which would result in the provision of wrong data.
He said those providing wrong information included those from Niger, Mali and other African countries.