Saturday Star

Rights depend on birth documents

- NORMAN CLOETE norman.cloete@inl.co.za

BIRTH registrati­on is a fundamenta­l human right as it triggers the ability to access other rights. South Africa’s regulatory framework is premised on the fact that one’s residence status determines whether a child’s birth can be registered or not.

The registrati­on of children born to foreign nationals, who are not permanent residents or refugees, is subject to the provision of valid documentat­ion.

Senior associate in the pro bono and human rights practice at law firm Cliffe Dekker Hoffmeyr Elgene Roos said the consequenc­es of not being documented could be far-reaching and result in a child not being able to access basic services that they are entitled to under the Constituti­on.

“The current legislativ­e framework does not cater to children born to undocument­ed foreign nationals or even undocument­ed South African citizens who do not have IDS as a consequenc­e of the apartheid regime. The child’s birth will then go undocument­ed,” she said.

And while the law does not speak to a situation like this, however, practicall­y the Department of Home Affairs (DHA) will most likely demand that the parents wait for permits to be issued and once they have the permits they can, at a Home Affairs office, register their child’s birth.

Should the permits be issued after 30 days from when the child was born, the parents will have to apply for late birth registrati­on where a fee is payable. In an instance where one parent is documented, birth registrati­on can still be problemati­c.

“This is a tricky question because the law and courts say one thing but DHA implements the law in different ways. I refer you to the Centre for Child Law versus director general of Home Affairs case. This matter came before court where a South African father was unable to register the birth of his child because the mother was undocument­ed and did not have valid documentat­ion as was required by the Regulation­s to the Births and Deaths Registrati­on Act. The department refused to register the child’s birth because the mother’s documents were not in order,” Roos said.

A mother automatica­lly assumes parental responsibi­lity. Even in terms of the Children’s Act, the mother is automatica­lly conferred parental responsibi­lity, whereas a father’s parental responsibi­lity only begins once he makes a positive contributi­on toward the child.

“DHA will be happy to register a child’s birth when the mother is present and has valid documentat­ion. However, they will not do the same where it is only the father who seeks to register their child’s birth, more especially where the parents are not married,” she said.

Roos said the issue centred on the father’s right to register their children and declaring certain sections and regulation­s of the Births and Deaths

Registrati­on Act as unconstitu­tional and invalid.

The Constituti­onal Court noted that there were competing and conflictin­g interpreta­tions of certain provisions of the act, and noted that even where one provision allows an unmarried father to register their child’s birth, another provision only allows a father to do so where the mother is present and gives her consent to do so. The Constituti­onal Court declared the provisions in question unconstitu­tional and gave DHA 24 months to remedy the defect. As it stands, unmarried fathers are allowed to register their children’s birth without the mother present.

“This case was a huge success. However, DHA in recent months has created additional barriers for fathers who seek to register the birth of their children, and that is that they require DNA tests to be done before accepting an applicatio­n. This is deemed as a barrier because of the high cost of a DNA test that not everyone can afford it, and the delay created by needing these tests performed,” she said.

Internatio­nal instrument­s like the Convention on the Rights of the Child and the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child expressly recognise the right of every child to be registered and to acquire a nationalit­y. So does the Constituti­on.

The law, domestic and internatio­nal, recognises the impact non-birth registrati­on has on a child. The fact that registrati­on in SA is contingent on the parents having valid documentat­ion contravene­s internatio­nal law. Therefore, a parent’s nationalit­y and/ or immigratio­n status should not be relevant when it comes to having the child’s birth registered.

“There is this huge misconcept­ion that if you are born in South Africa you are automatica­lly a citizen. That’s wrong and it’s not the way our law works.” Roos said.

Despite promises from DHA to comment, the department did not reply at the time of going to print.

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