The Herald (Zimbabwe)

RG’s Office rolls out mobile registrati­on

- Felex Share Senior Reporter

THE Registrar General’s Office has begun the national mobile registrati­on for people to acquire identity documents as part of preparatio­ns for next year’s harmonised elections.

The department is focusing on registrati­on of national identity cards, births and deaths certificat­es.

The mobile registrati­on exercise, which will run for three months, will end on November 30.

Registrar-General Mr Tobaiwa Mudede yesterday said every district in the country’s 10 provinces had mobile teams.

“We started mobile registrati­on on Monday at our designated centres and static offices,” he said.

“Everything is in place. Every province now has the itinerarie­s. We appeal to all citizens to come forward and register for personal documents. On the turn out so far, we still have to check. We are not yet getting figures daily because people were setting up.”

Identity card replacemen­ts and verificati­on is also being done during the same period.

Zimbabwe goes for harmonised elections next year and no one will be allowed to vote without a national identifica­tion card.

Mr Mudede said for one to register for a particular document, certain requiremen­ts had to be met as prescribed by the law.

“We reaffirm that citizens should bring with them the birth confirmati­on records

from health institutio­ns and their identity document to enable them to register their child for birth certificat­e,” he said.

“For those registerin­g for national identity documents, they should produce their birth certificat­es. Those who do not meet the said registrati­on requiremen­ts should not delay the registrati­on process.”

Mr Mudede said the exercise was not for granting citizenshi­p.

“Citizenshi­p has procedures that we go through,” he said.

“We have our friends — foreigners and aliens who are here. Some have entered through immigratio­n points and have been in this country for some time.

“There is time, which is statutoril­y provided for them. The procedure is that they will come to our offices not mobile offices. When they come, we do checks together with the immigratio­n department, the time provided by the law they have stayed in this country.

“If they clear themselves through immigratio­n they come we give them forms and after completion there are checks, the vetting processes we go through. This is internatio­nal.

“There is no country on earth that just gives citizenshi­p. After vetting they will then be granted citizenshi­p. This time of three months (of national mobile registrati­on) does not finish that business.

“Those who would like to have their citizenshi­p status regularise­d must come through our offices. Citizenshi­p is not de-centralise­d, it is centralise­d.”

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