New Era

US agencies give hope to the undocument­ed

- ■ Paheja Siririka - psiririka@nepc.com.na

THE lack of or incomplete personal documentat­ions have been associated with many increasing cases of statelessn­ess but the situation becomes incomprehe­nsible when the person is undocument­ed in their own country.

Although being undocument­ed is not the same as being stateless, the lack of identity documents such as a birth certificat­e has the potential and can lead to statelessn­ess.

A collaborat­ion launched in August 2022 between the home affairs ministry, the US government through the United States Agency of Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAID) and its implementi­ng partner, Project HOPE Namibia (PHN), is in the process of ensuring that many families are now able to obtain birth certificat­es swiftly and easily at selected mobile processing points.

The campaign is primarily focusing on registerin­g undocument­ed Namibians to acquire national documents and specifical­ly targets over 4 800 beneficiar­ies of PHN’s Adherence Retention Project for orphans and vulnerable children. “Iwasdismay­edwhentwoo­fmygrandch­ildren were unable to enroll in school because they did not have birth certificat­es. I felt a sense of duty to ensure that they did not endure

a similar fate elsewhere,” said Anastasia Hafunda who hails from Eenhana.

Flanked by nosy toddlers, Hafunda flips through a folder of documents and one-byone, she excitedly shows the much awaited and precious content - birth certificat­es for seven of her grandchild­ren.

“We are very happy to have benefitted

from this initiative. Previously, none of the children had birth certificat­es, making it difficult for them to be officially part of our society or to apply for social grants,” she said, adding that that eight more are currently being processed by the line ministry and will be issued soon.

Up until this moment, 15 of the 21 members of the Hafunda household had never been issued formal birth certificat­es. Living without them meant that many public services were simply inaccessib­le, a challenge only exacerbate­d by the family’s daily responsibi­lities tending their farm in a remote village far from public service providers.

Similar experience­s are felt throughout the country as it is estimated that 10% of Namibians are undocument­ed.

The Hafunda family solely relied on Anastasia’s insufficie­nt monthly pension to meet their basic needs but with the children now eligible for social grants, their household income has increased significan­tly.

“I can finally breathe a sigh of relief knowing that my grandchild­ren will not go to bed on an empty stomach,” she said.

The civil registrati­on campaign has so far issued identifica­tion cards and birth certificat­es to about 700 previously undocument­ed Namibians in the Oshikoto, Ohangwena, and Khomas regions - the majority of whom are orphans and vulnerable children enrolled in Project HOPE’s Namibia Adherence and Retention Project (NARP).

The campaign will be expanded to Zambezi, Oshana, Omusati, and Kavango East and West in 2023.

 ?? Photo: Contribute­d ?? Documented… The Hafunda family from Eenhana, including seven grandchild­ren who received their Namibian birth certificat­es.
Photo: Contribute­d Documented… The Hafunda family from Eenhana, including seven grandchild­ren who received their Namibian birth certificat­es.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Namibia