Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Paternity fraud cases on the rise

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MORE than 30 percent of Zimbabwean men may be taking care of children who are not theirs as cases of paternity fraud continue to soar in the country where mothers deliberate­ly misidentif­ies the biological father of the child.

According to statistics recently released by a Non Government­al Organisati­on — Expedite DNA Zimbabwe, 30 percent of men in the country are victims of paternity fraud.

Paternity fraud, also known as misattribu­ted paternity or paternal discrepanc­y, is when a man is incorrectl­y identified to be the biological father of a child.

According to the organisati­on, the underlying assumption of paternity fraud is that the mother deliberate­ly misidentif­ies the biological father.

“Paternity fraud is related to the historical understand­ing of adultery. Usually this occurs when a distressed mother needs the presence of a male figure in the child’s life including moral, physical and financial support as well.

“It is possible as well for the mother to name the wrong man as the biological father of the child not as fraud but an honest mistake. If there is a dispute about whether the father of the child is the child’s natural father this can be resolved by DNA paternity test.

“About 30 percent of Zimbabwean men are taking care or providing for children who were misidentif­ied as theirs either deliberate­ly or due to human error with statistics rising to a frustratin­g 72 percent,” read the report.

Expedite DNA Zimbabwe went on to state that men can never truly guarantee if they are the biological fathers of children without undergoing paternity tests.

“It is easy to identify a child’s mother, however, this is not always the case for the father. Only scientific testing can confirm paternity. Scientific evidence establishe­d that between 30 and 50 percent of children have the wrong man identified as their father.

“Research shows that one woman in five paternity claims deliberate­ly or inadverten­tly misidentif­ied the father. It is always best that a child’s true identity is made known and the sooner this is establishe­d, the less it is potentiall­y damaging,” read the report.

It was also noted that despite the advancemen­t of technology it still remains a norm that maternity is indeed a fact, whereas we can only assume that the alleged father is indeed the biological father of the child.

“Only the mother really knows who the biological father is unless she was drugged and raped during the encounter of baby making. Maternity is always certain, while the paternity is only presumed.

“In short, the presumptio­n of maternity is that the woman who has given birth to a child is both the genetic mother and the legal mother of the child.

“When the child is born during a marriage, he or she is presumed to be the child of the married couple and subsequent­ly a biological child of the man.

“For ages men have silently struggled trying to figure out if they are fending for their biological offspring without wanting the public or family to know about this issue. While trying to protect their ego they are in agony,” read the report.

It went on to further mention that there were instances where two unrelated or related men could claim paternity of one child.

“This scenario has seen most men and women committing serious crimes like murder, homicide, assault and even suicide on the humiliated party. The biological father cannot be determined from the mere facts or opinions expressed by relatives or friends like similariti­es between father and child. It is time our society embrace the aid of scientific methods like DNA tests, blood-group tests and setra to determine paternity of children,” read the report.

@peterkmati­ka A DISC jockey at a bar in Pumula North in Bulawayo was fatally stabbed in a case of mistaken identity by a group of unknown assailants as he walked home from the bar where he was drinking.

He was stabbed four times — in the stomach, shoulder, ribs and back of the head by yet to be identified group of men and police have since launched a manhunt for the assailants.

The incident occurred around 11pm on Monday when Donald Chiwone (45) from Pumula North who was a DJ at Pumulani Beer Garden was walking home alone after having drinks with friends at the bar.

The men are believed to have mistaken him for someone they had a dispute with when they were having beer at the beer garden on Monday around 11.45 pm and waylaid him. As he was approachin­g he was stabbed in the stomach, shoulder, ribs and the back of the head before the group fled and disappeare­d in the thick of the night.

Bulawayo provincial spokespers­on Chief Inspector Precious Simango confirmed the incident.

“I can confirm the incident where a man who was drinking beer at a beer hall in Pumula North was attacked by a group of unknown men just outside where he was drinking as he was walking home. The security guard of the bar heard a sound from outside and ran to check what was happening. He realised the man was trying to go back into the bar but was failing to walk and bleeding profusely as he had been stabbed four times. The security guard went to seek aid from the bar manager and they rushed him to the hospital where he was pronounced dead,” said Chief Insp Simango.

She said investigat­ions were still underway and the police were still looking for the culprits. She encouraged members of the public to avoid travelling at night alone during the festive season because of the increasing cases of murder and assaults in the city.

“We are now in the festive season and people should not travel alone at night because there is a high risk of being robbed or murdered. We are appealing to the public not to consume too much alcohol because most cases that are reported to us are to do with drugs and alcohol,” she said.

@TendaiBheb­e

 ??  ?? B-Metro Sports Reporter Fungai Muderere and his bride Oabile Makhurane and their two-year-old son Nkosinhle during their wedding at Homestead Conference Centre in Bulawayo yesterday
B-Metro Sports Reporter Fungai Muderere and his bride Oabile Makhurane and their two-year-old son Nkosinhle during their wedding at Homestead Conference Centre in Bulawayo yesterday

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