Cape Times

Draft birth regulation slammed

Activists see move as pretext to deny papers to foreign children

- DOMINIC ADRIAANSE dominic.adriaanse@inl.co.za

THE public has until today to make comments on the proposed new regulation­s for the registrati­on of births and deaths which activists say will lead to the discontinu­ation of the issuing of birth certificat­es to foreign children.

In a joint statement the Centre for Child Law, Lawyers for Human Rights, the Scalabrini Centre of Cape Town and the UCT Refugee Law Clinic said the draft regulation served no legitimate purpose and could only be an effort to exclude foreign children.

“It will make it significan­tly more difficult for vulnerable children (such as abandoned and orphaned children) to get birth certificat­es (because it is difficult to establish a link to a foreign country without parents).

“It will make it impossible for asylum seeker and refugee children to get birth certificat­es because they cannot approach their embassies for birth certificat­es,” said Liesl Muller of Lawyers for Human Rights.

The draft regulation requires children to present their “confirmati­on of birth” to their embassy to obtain a birth certificat­e from their country of nationalit­y.

Muller said they assisted more than 700 persons in the past three years with birth registrati­ons, including people entitled to birth registrati­on but were denied.

“The inevitable effect will be that non-national children will struggle to register their births, and refugee children, stateless children and abandoned children will not be able to obtain a birth certificat­e at all.

“We wonder whether the Department of Home Affairs has considered the effect that the amendment will have,” Centre for Child Law’s senior attorney, Anjuli Maistry said.

According to the rights groups, where previously all children were issued with birth certificat­es, according to the new form, the document is “not a birth certificat­e”.

Department of Home Affairs spokespers­on Thabo Mokgola said: “The comments on the draft regulation­s referred to have not been received and considered and therefore (it is) unfair to expect the department to comment when we have not even considered the submission­s on the matter. The closing date for submission­s of comments is November 16.

‘‘Responses to comments follow a particular process of engagement internally and until approval by the relevant authority.”

Comments can be emailed to advocate Tsietsi Sebelemetj­a at Tsietsi. Sebelemetj­a@dha.gov.za and advocate Moses Malakate at Moses.Malakate@ dha.gov.za

 ?? HENK KRUGER African News Agency (ANA) ?? Human rights organisati­ons have slammed the Department of Home Affairs’s proposed new regulation­s for the registrati­on of births and deaths. They say these will lead to the end of the issuing of birth certificat­es to foreign children. |
HENK KRUGER African News Agency (ANA) Human rights organisati­ons have slammed the Department of Home Affairs’s proposed new regulation­s for the registrati­on of births and deaths. They say these will lead to the end of the issuing of birth certificat­es to foreign children. |

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