BIRTH REGISTRATION SECURING YOUR
CHILD’S FUTURE
When thieves
broke into my house during the festive they stole my identity documents among
other valuables they looted. No birth certificate; no passport, I was officially not able to prove my
existence or citizenship even my name.
I took it
upon myself to get my documents from the Registrar’s office starting with my
birth certificate. At the registrar’s
office I was already late to beat the queue at 630 in the morning because the
queue was meandering and long. While we were waiting to be served we started
sharing our birth registration issues that had brought us together. The
problems were ranging from wrong spellings, missing certificates, torn and old
birth certificates, new registration and registering children who were born out
of the country. What really shocked me was that were two young men in their
early twenties who did not have birth certificates. Chilling and pathetic were their
testimonies of how they reached that age without any formal registration. We
all wondered how these young men had lived all these years off the official
record and what could have happened to to them if they had an accident or if
ever they wanted to be formally employed, they already had failed to write
their grade seven examination because they did not exist officially and it was
their families that had denied them this right.
What is
birth registration and why bothering yourself to register your child promptly
one may ask? The UNICEF Report (2013) defines registration as the continuous,
permanent and universal recording, within the civil registry, of the occurrence
and characteristics of births in accordance with the legal requirements of a
country. The Government of Zimbabwe enacted the Birth and Death Registration
Act (5.02) as statutory instrument for the registration of all births (and
deaths as well) in the country. In the
new constitution of Zimbabwe it has been enshrined that all Zimbabwean citizens
are entitled to, among other things birth certificate and other identity
documents issued by the state. In the process of registering the birth of a
child a parent or guardian has to firstly notify through a hospital or through
an informant to the Registrar’s officers which will register and issue a birth
certificate within a week or two.
Despite the
availability of these legal instruments and officials ready to serve, many
children are not registered and do not have birth certificate throughout the
country. UNICEF estimated that between 2010 and 2012, only 49 percent of the
children under the age of five were registered and issued with birth
certificates in Zimbabwe. In rural areas approximately 70 percent of the
children are not registered while in the urban areas 43 percent are not
registered. It is also estimated that nearly 230 million children under the age
of five have never been registered worldwide.
Many parents
or guardians who do not register their children always take for granted the
importance of birth certificates. A child who does not have a birth certificate
does not legally exist. This lack of
formal recognition by the state means that the child does not have a legal
name, nationality or citizenship rights neither ;neither can their age can be
ascertained.
The major
hindrances in obtaining birth certificate are the bureaucracy at the
registrar’s office, the rigorous systems, screening and vetting the parent the
parent and the long distances that parents or guardians travel to the registrar’s office. Parents in some
cases overlook or fail to understand the
importance of a birth certificate and only rush when there is a pressing need like when the child is about to go to
school, writing an examination, or when there are inheritance squabbles.
Late registration fees imposed by the state may
encourage parents to register their children early but the statistics prove
that the state is imposing an unfair burden on families that find it difficult
to register such as those living in resettlements, farms and remote rural areas
which are poorly served by government services and cannot afford the fees no
matter how now nominal it may be.
Registered
children have a step ahead in securing their future as they will be recognised
by the law hence their rights will be safeguarded. Without a birth certificate the a child may be denied
access to health and education, forced into early marriages or be pushed into
the labour market or be detained as adults if they are accused of a crime because no one can prove
their age. These violations of the child rights can only be averted if there is
a concerted effort to register children all the times.
Statistically
it is important to register children because it tracks the entry and exit of a
human being into the world and it will help in data gathering. This data will
be necessary for development policies and programming in health, education,
employment and industrial production. No proper planning by the government or
local authority can be done without proper data from birth and death
registration.
Birth
registration is a right that will also ensure the fulfilment of other rights in
the future life of the child. It is therefore upon the government to make
possible the easy access of the registrar‘s offices for the families in
isolated areas; to remove the late registration fees for such communities as
resettlements, farms and rural areas. In this era of ICT there is need to
invest in the acquiring of such technology especially mobile communication
technologies to increase birth registration coverage and avoid congesting the
district or central registry office which has been a cause the snail’s pace
services at such offices.
No one can steal your future without killing you because you are the future
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