The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

‘Civic document centres to cover all districts’

-

Sunday Mail Reporter

ZIMBABWE has made significan­t progress in fulfilling the Constituti­onal requiremen­t to make civic documents like birth certificat­es, IDs and passports easily accessible to the public by leveraging on the Devolution Programme spearheade­d by the Second Republic, President Mnangagwa has said.

Until the ongoing drive by the new political administra­tion to ensure citizens are “equitably served”, services remained largely “centralise­d in favour of metropolit­an provinces, cities and towns at the expense of historical­ly marginalis­ed rural provinces, districts, wards and villages”.

Writing in his weekly column for The Sunday Mail, the President said one of the hallmarks of successful­ly devolving power was bringing core services closer to citizens and communitie­s, thus facilitati­ng access, enabling participat­ion and achieving inclusivit­y and fairness.

Last year, Zimbabwe became one of the few African countries on the continent producing e-passports.

Launched on December 14, 2021, the e-passport is in line with the worldwide shift towards biometric data-based identity and travel documents.

“Our eyes are now trained on availabili­ty of passports and other travel documents, both to citizens here at home and to those living in the Diaspora. Through an inventive panoply of measures we have now taken, I am confident all the rights and benefits related to citizen documentat­ion as promised by Chapter 3 of our Constituti­on will be efficientl­y met and delivered to our citizens.”

President Mnangagwa said

he was personally aware of the challenges in accessing passports after he made unschedule­d visits to the offices of the Registrar-General.

The subsequent interventi­ons made by Government have resulted in e-passport services being spread to centres such as Beitbridge, Hwange, Bulawayo, Lupane, Gweru, among others.

Service centres are expected to rise to 14 by September, “with the momentum being maintained until all the districts are covered,” he said.

To date, millions of people in rural areas have been able to acquire birth certificat­es and national identity cards due to an ongoing blitz implemente­d by the Registrar-General’s Office.

The civic documents are also being issued free of charge.

In areas that were affected by the post-Independen­ce disturbanc­es, where some people still do not have key national documents, Government resolved to simplify requiremen­ts for issuance of documents and launch mobile registrati­on and issuance units, including making the registrati­on process free.

“I am now happy that access to birth certificat­es and national identity cards has vastly improved, with many who had lived in the twilight zone of citizenshi­p feeling they now belong and are empowered,” said President Mnangagwa.

The Diaspora will be catered for as well. A number of embassies have made progress in setting up systems to issue passports at their stations.

“Already, work has started in Pretoria, Johannesbu­rg and Cape Town, so the large community of Zimbabwean emigres living there will be served. Plans are underway to launch similar outreach services in Lusaka, Zambia; in London, United Kingdom; inWashingt­on and New York in the USA, in Australia and in the Middle East,”he said.

The initiative is being prioritise­d after the President’s routine interactio­ns with the Diaspora during his foreign assignment­s. The net result of the various measures being rolled out by Government, the President said, will help fulfil these critical Constituti­onal obligation­s.

“With these cocktail of measures, we have already taken or are about to take, I am confident that we will be in full compliance with expectatio­ns of our Constituti­on on this one matter.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe