The Hindu (Hyderabad)

Govt. to record parents’ religion to register births

Current practice is to record religion of child’s family only; the database may be used to update NPR, voter rolls, Aadhaar, ration cards, passports and driving licence; States yet to notify new rules

- Vijaita Singh

When registerin­g the birth of a child, parents will now be required to separately record the religion of the father and mother, according to Model Rules drafted by the Union Ministry of Home Affairs. These Rules will have to be adopted and notified by the State government­s before they are implemente­d.

Earlier, only the family’s religion was recorded in birth registers. The proposed “Form No.1Birth Report” will expand the column requiring a tick mark selection “for religion” of the child to now also state the “religion of father” and “religion of mother”. Similar changes have been made for parents of an adopted child.

Under the Registrati­on of Births and Deaths (Amendment) Act, 2023, passed by Parliament on August 11 last year, the birth and death database will be maintained at the national level and may be used to update the National Population Register (NPR), electoral rolls, Aadhaar number, ration card, passport, driving licence, property registrati­on, and such other databases as may be notified.

According to the law, which became effective October 1 last year, all reported births and deaths in the country are to be digitally registered through the

Centre’s portal for the Civil Registrati­on System (crsorgi.gov.in). The digital birth certificat­es issued under this system will become a single document to prove the date of birth for various services, including admission to educationa­l institutio­ns.

The office of the Registrar General of India (RGI) under the Union Home Ministry has proposed substituti­ng the existing forms related to the registrati­on of births, deaths, still births, adoptions, and the Medical Certificat­e of Cause of Death as per the draft rules. The certificat­e will also include the “history of illness, if any” from now on, apart from the actual cause of death.

Any birth register includes two parts: legal informatio­n and statistica­l informatio­n. The informatio­n on the parents’ religion is to be maintained for statistica­l informatio­n.

The birth register form pertaining to legal informatio­n has been expanded to record the Aadhaar number, and the mobile and email IDs of both the parents, “if available”. The address box has been made more descriptiv­e to contain the name of the State, district, subdistric­t, town or village, ward number (in case of town and if available), locality, house number, and PIN code.

The “informant” providing the informatio­n in the form will also have to provide their Aadhaar and mobile numbers, and email address, along with the name and address details which were earlier required.

National database

According to the 2023 amendment, the RGI shall maintain the database of registered births and deaths at the national level and it is obligatory upon the Chief Registrars and the Registrars to share the data of registered births and deaths to such a database.

According to the parent Act — the Registrati­on of Births and Deaths Act, 1969 — the RGI has been empowered to take steps to coordinate and unify the activities of Chief Registrars, who are appointed by State government­s. Civil Registrati­on System (CRS) functionar­ies are appointed up to the panchayat level.

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