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Lack
of birth certificates continue to haunt school children
Child Protection Society (CPS)
Extracted from the Child Advocate Newsletter, Issue No. 3
December 2003
Despite widespread national campaigns
conducted regularly to highlight the hardships faced by Zimbabwean
children due to lack of birth certificates, the identity woes continue
to haunt them and to negatively affect their education.
A recent workshop organised
by CPS established that thousands of school going children experience
untold hardships because they do not have birth certificates. Some
are forced to walk daily distances of as long as 15 kilometres to
attend schools that do make birth certificates strict requirements
for admission. By the time they get into class, such children are
too tired to concentrate on their lessons.
Workshop participants
called on government to relax laws on birth registration to allow
every child born in the country to obtain a birth certificate hassle-free,
regardless of circumstances surrounding their birth.
Research conducted recently
showed that in Mashonaland East province alone, 225 boys and 223
girls aged between six and 14 years, out of a studied population
of 5,850 children, had dropped out of school mainly due to lack
of birth certificates. More than half of the affected children had
failed to obtain birth certificates because they were orphaned.
By denying children birth
certificates, the state which is supposed to act as the duty bearer
to all children born in this country, exposes them to more dangers
and abuses. A girl aged under 16 (EDITOR - am not sure of this –
is the age of sexual consent 16 or 18) can be sexually abused, but
courts may fail to prosecute an offender if no records of her actual
age are available in the form of a birth certificate.
Several strategies can
be adopted to ensure all children acquire birth certificates. A
massive campaign by both government and civil society on the importance
of birth certificates, is one. But such a campaign will be futile
as long as government does not remove strict requirements for the
registration of a child. Government can also make use of traditional
chiefs and other local leadership structures to help in birth registration.
Incorporating birth registration in the school curricula, will also
raise awareness among the children themselves on the importance
of birth certificates.
Visit the Child Protection
Society fact
sheet
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