No.
This is what I was referring to earlier about something I learned about only comparatively recently, I do not have what is called "a minds eye".
For all my life I thought people were just being poetic about "seeing" things when they close their eyes, when they said "I can imagine a red apple". I did not realise that you all actually meant you see something like you see something in the real world. I cannot "visualise" anything in my minds eye, when I think about someone I can not call up their face in my mind, I cannot "experience red" unless I am looking at something that is red.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aphantasia
This means I have no separate "experience of redness" away from my direct perception of things that are red. Therefore I do not have "qualia" so even if they exist they are not a necessary component of consciousness.
Just from what is written in that brief Wiki page, without checking to see what (if any) other recent properly conducted research has been done, the description is of a condition, or rather something that is
thought to be a condition, that is by no means clear as being unusual at all, or even clear as being anything actually different from what everyone else normally experiences. By which I mean ...
... from that Wiki description it's far from clear that other people really are visualising images which are as vivid and realistic as they are claiming.
Why should we be sceptical of people saying that they can visualises a highly realistic bright red or green apple, simply by closing their eyes whilst fully awake and deciding to visualise whatever they wish ... why should we be sceptical of the accuracy of any claim such as that? The answer is because human history is overflowing with zillions of claims of what people say they can experience or "see" as "visions" or imagery in their thoughts or in the "minds eye" ... but afaik, very few of those cases can be shown, or have been shown, to be as clear and well-defined as the person is saying ...
... IOW, afaik it is far more common for people to say that all sorts of things were/are very clearly envisioned or experienced or manifesting in their thoughts, but it's far less clear that their experiences are actually much if any different to what other people experience when they describe a far less obvious vivid or clear imagination.
Or to put that even more clearly – I certainly cannot visualise a realistic 3D image of an apple (or anything else), merely by closing my eyes (or, why even close your eyelids??) and deciding that I will conjure up any such fabricated visions. On which basis, I would naturally be suspicious of others who claimed they could do that … I expect they are actually getting no clearer “vision” than I or anyone else can normally produce/create/imagine ... the difference only being that the most "vivid" part is their way of describing it (rather than the clarity and realism of the on-demand imagination).