The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Registrar decries late birth registrati­ons

- Cletus Mushanawan­i Mashonalan­d Central Bureau Chief

IT is an offence not to register a child within 42 days of birth and more needs to be done by way of publicity to ensure people know the importance of the requiremen­t, Mashonalan­d Central provincial registrar Mr Tafadzwa Nyandoro has said.

Appearing before the Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission’s Mashonalan­d Central National Inquiry on Access to Documentat­ion in Zimbabwe in Bindura on Tuesday, Mr Nyandoro said less than five percent of birth registrati­ons were being done within the 42-day period.

“According to the Births and Deaths Registrati­on Act, it is an offence not to register a child within 42 days of its birth,” he said.

Sadly, very few people know of this requiremen­t and the few that do will not bother to take heed. “Other known factors which prevent ease of access to the birth certificat­e include inaccessib­ility of registrati­on offices, especially to rural communitie­s. In Mashonalan­d Central, we have one provincial office, eight district offices and 22 sub-offices.

“While this is commendabl­e, sadly these are not sufficient. In the last 10 years, we have only had two mobile registrati­on exercises due to resource constraint­s.” Mr Nyandoro said they were facing challenges in establishi­ng the actual nationalit­ies of people who lived along border areas.

“In areas bordering Zambia and Mozambique, especially in Mbire, Muzarabani, Mt Darwin and Rushinga, there are communitie­s who live along the border line and it is often difficult to establish their actual nationalit­y,” he said.

Parents may be from different sides of the border and they do not hold travel documents and neither do they cross the border procedural­ly.

“It is difficult to register these people’s families. When we tell them of our requiremen­ts, they have been asking us to change our legislatio­n in order to make it easy to account for their families.

“There is need for the Registrar Department to set up an Informatio­n and Publicity Department. There is also need for all stakeholde­rs with interests in the issue of official documentat­ion to help and assist the department in as far as spreading and disseminat­ing informatio­n.

“A lot could change if we all co-operate in spreading the requiremen­t for the mandatory registrati­on of a child before its attains six weeks. Many people come to our office ill-equipped on what we provide and the requiremen­ts for these services. Many people criticise our requiremen­ts because they do not understand the importance of security in terms of identity.”

On the decentrali­sation of passport issuance, Mr Nyandoro said: “Many criticise the lack of decentrali­sation of passport issuance because they do not know that a passport is a treasured national document which cannot be risked by being issued anywhere.”

He called for the mobile registrati­on to be done once in every two years to ensure that people in accessible areas are reached.

Mr Nyandoro said there was need to align laws like the Citizenshi­p Act with the new Constituti­on, as the officials are finding it difficult to effectivel­y discharge their duties.

“The citizenshi­p issue is still a grey area until the Act is aligned to the new Constituti­on, he said. Our hands remained tied until the Citizenshi­p Act is aligned to the Constituti­on.”

Mr Nyandoro lamented the poor office accommodat­ion they have in outlying areas like Muzarabani.

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