Philippine Daily Inquirer

Poe seeks probe of unregister­ed births

- By TJ Burgonio

AT LEAST 7.5 million Filipinos, including children, are vulnerable to traffickin­g and may also find it difficult to enrol in schools, find jobs, travel or run for office—all because their births were not registered.

Birth registrati­on establishe­s the official identity of a child and protects them from harm and exploitati­on, according to Sen. Grace Poe, who has pushed for an inquiry into the extent of unregister­ed births among the estimated 98 million Filipinos.

Lack informatio­n

The United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef) has reported that 10 percent of Filipinos under the age of five were not registered at birth.

The Unicef report noted that many families in rural areas lacked informatio­n on how to register their children officially and may not fully appreciate the significan­ce of birth registrati­on. Most of them were also discourage­d by the high fees and tedious process involved.

Symptom of inequity

According to Plan Internatio­nal, a developmen­t organizati­on operating in 50 countries across Africa, Asia and the Americas, 7.5 million Filipino children and adults have no basic proof of identity.

“Unregister­ed births are a symptom of the inequities and disparitie­s in society, with poor children from certain ethnic groups becoming the most vulnerable,” Poe said in filing Senate Resolution No. 417.

Birth registrati­on is just as crucial to the government’s database and enables officials to craft sound socioecono­mic policies, the senator added.

Poe cited the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child which mandates the immediate registrati­on of children after birth and their right to a name and nationalit­y.

Several laws, among them Commonweal­th Act Nos. 591 and 3753, Presidenti­al Decree 651 and Republic Act No. 9048, provide for a legal framework for the registrati­on of births, Poe said.

Basic human right

Looking into the status of unregister­ed births in the country could help legislator­s craft laws that would ensure a 100-percent birth profiling, she said, adding that the issue was about upholding one’s basic human right to a legally recognized name and nationalit­y.

Poe also urged the National Statistics Office, local government­s, private and government hospitals, clinics and birthing facilities to swiftly facilitate late birth registrati­ons for free.

No proof

Social welfare officers have said that the lack of a birth certificat­e could pose challenges to a person enrolling in school, applying for a job, securing travel documents, or just enjoying the benefits of Filipino citizenshi­p.

Plan Internatio­nal also cited the case of minors in conflict with the law who ended up in regular jails because they could not present proof that they were under age.

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