The Citizen (KZN)

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FAILINGS: BUT SA LEADS AFRICA IN REGISTERIN­G KIDS

- Gcina Ntsaluba – gcinan@citizen.co.za

Quarter of world’s children ‘invisible’, according to new research report.

The failings of SA’s electricit­y provider, national airline and several other state-owned enterprise­s aside, it appears the country is at least leading the continent in one aspect: the registrati­on of children.

Despite significan­t increases in birth registrati­on, a quarter of the world’s children remain unregister­ed and “invisible”, according to a new report by the United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef), which works in more than 190 countries to save children’s lives and help them to access basic services such as healthcare and education.

The report, titled Birth Registrati­on for Every Child by 2030: Are we on track?, indicates that SA is the top-ranked country in Africa with an 89% (roughly 5.7 million) child birth registrati­on rate for children under the age of five.

“We have come a long way but too many children are still slipping through the cracks, uncounted and unaccounte­d for,” said Unicef executive director Henrietta Fore.

“A child not registered at birth is invisible – non-existent in the eyes of the government or the law.

“Without proof of identity, children are often excluded from education, healthcare and other vital services, and are more vulnerable to exploitati­on and abuse.”

There are an estimated 237 million children under age five worldwide without birth certificat­es.

One in four children under five – 166 million – on average, are not registered. And even when they are, they may not have proof of registrati­on.

Unicef regional director for Eastern and Southern Africa Mohamed Fall said families often face steep barriers to birth registrati­on, including long distances to the nearest facility, lack of knowledge about how to register and high fees required for a birth certificat­e.

In some countries, children from marginalis­ed groups may face higher barriers, which can result from living in remote areas or among communitie­s that frequently move, making access to registrati­on services difficult.

“We have seen a pattern that where there is conflict and unrest in a particular country, there is less likelihood that children will be registered due to lack of access to services,” said Fall.

The lack of accurate birth registrati­on data could be an obstacle for government­s for planning purposes.

“If they do not have the right data, they cannot do proper planning as they should,” he said.

The report, which analysed data from 174 countries, indicated that sub-Saharan Africa is lagging behind the rest of the world in this regard.

According to the department of home affairs, a child must be registered within 30 days after birth.

The birth can be registered by a parent, guardian or any other person legally responsibl­e for the child at an office of the department.

If the parents are overseas, the birth can be registered at the nearest embassy or mission.

The findings of the report are intended to inform the developmen­t of policies and programmes and seek to raise awareness of the need to strengthen registrati­on as the most effective strategy to achieve universal birth registrati­on and to ensure that every child is given a legal identity from birth.

Register an overseas birth at the nearest embassy

 ?? Picture: EPA-EFE ?? Spain’s new low-cost, high-speed train service, Avlo, will start running on April 6 between Madrid and Barcelona. Other routes will be added later. It will not have a bar car.
Picture: EPA-EFE Spain’s new low-cost, high-speed train service, Avlo, will start running on April 6 between Madrid and Barcelona. Other routes will be added later. It will not have a bar car.

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