The Citizen (Gauteng)

Pupil’s birth certificat­e woes

EXAMS: DOCUMENTS NEEDED BY ALL PUPILS WRITING

- Rorisang Kgosana rorisangk@citizen.co.za

Musa Ntsieng’s applicatio­n has been in the home affairs system for two years.

ASoshanguv­e matric pupil is concerned about completing high school as he has been waiting for his birth certificat­e to apply for an ID card for the past two years.

Musa Ntsieng, 21, said his mother had only applied for his birth certificat­e at the home affairs department in Nafcoc shopping centre, Soshanguve, in January 2016 in order to apply for an ID document so her son could complete matric.

“My mother also didn’t have an ID. She applied for her own ID and my birth certificat­e at the same time. She received her ID but I am still waiting for my birth certificat­e so I can also apply,” he said.

Ntsieng, who is doing his matric at Senthibele Senior Secondary School in Block R, said he was always turned away by home affairs officials, who told him they had a backlog of applicatio­ns to process.

“They told me I should get an SMS informing me of my applicatio­n and another to inform me to return to come and collect my birth certificat­e. I never got a call. I only got an SMS to confirm that I had applied.

“In Febuary this year, we went back and they told us they are still dealing with applicatio­ns from 2014 and are not sure when they will complete my birth certificat­e.”

The pupil is worried about completing his final matric exam as he still needs to apply for an ID card, which is required when writing the exam. He says several other pupils in his school are facing the same challenge. “I don’t even have an ID number. Just a date of birth. How am I going to write my exam? Even if the school arranges for me to write, and I pass, I will still be stuck. It means next year I won’t be able to do anything,” he told

How am I going to write my exam?

The Citizen.

Ntsieng’s matter has now been referred to the unit that deals with late registrati­on of birth to investigat­e why the issue has taken two years to resolve, home affairs spokespers­on Thabo Mokgola confirmed. He said issues of late registrati­on of birth usually take six months to resolve. –

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