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Corruption
impedes right to an identity
IRIN
News
November 02, 2010
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=90953
Getting a passport can be vital for making a living
but mounting hidden costs are making it tougher to access one, despite
the government recently slashing passport fees.
Fees have been reduced from US$140 to $50, but the
document can cost up to $120 or even $300, as Theresa Makone, the
joint minister of home affairs, discovered on an impromptu visit
to the Harare office which issues passports.
Makone, whose visit to the office had been prompted
by allegations of corruption, acknowledged that police and officials
at the Registrar General's office were asking for bribes from
those seeking passports, birth certificates or other ID documents.
"After what I have seen here today, it seems
serious investigations have to be carried out . . . Passports are
supposed to be a birthright, not a privilege. People should not
have hassles in accessing passports," she said.
Passports are critical for the many Zimbabweans
who have been forced to seek jobs outside their own country.
Tazvita Siziba, 35, from Harare, was laid off by
a textile firm. She needs a passport to buy goods in Botswana for
sale in Zimbabwe to support her two school-going children. Unable
to bribe, she had been queuing for two weeks without success.
Excuses
IRIN spoke to civil servants who confessed to taking
bribes but pleaded poverty and a genuine concern to speed up services
as their excuse.
"I am an overworked and poorly paid civil servant
and I do not have any problems making use of my position at work
to earn the extra dollar," said Ivy Moyo*, a senior employee
at the Registrar General's office in Harare. "Since the government
reduced the price for a passport, demand has shot up, but the applicants
are finding it difficult even to submit their applications."
''If Cynthia
fails to get a birth certificate this time, she might just as well
forget about school and start seriously thinking about getting married''
She said she could pocket up to $500 a day to speed up the process
of acquiring a passport. "This is manna to me, considering
that I am paid [a salary of] $210 a month."
Innocent Makwiramiti, a Harare-based economist,
reckoned corruption was a reflection of the weak economy and it
might not have been a good idea to lower the passport application
fees. "The officials are poorly paid and they would seize the
slightest opportunity to get the money that they so desperately
need... Lowering the fees for passports created a huge demand that
the officials are cashing in on."
Delays in processing ID and travel documents were
also being caused by the use, since early 2009, of multiple currencies,
according to a parliamentary committee scrutinizing the work of
the Home Affairs Ministry.
After a tour of the passport office in Harare recently,
Paul Madzore, the committee chairperson, said ensuring currency
notes were authentic was time-consuming.
Remote
areas worst off
People in remote rural areas are finding it even
harder to access registration documents. Government cutbacks led
to the closure of the Registrar's mobile units, and offices
in remote areas were often unable to function because of stationary
or equipment shortages.
Cynthia Mapondera, 19, from Mukumbura District near
Zimbabwe's eastern border with Mozambique, failed to do her school-leaving
exams for the second year running because she did not have a birth
certificate.
Mapondera, whose mother is serving time in prison,
travelled to the nearest town, Mount Darwin, about 170km northeast
of Harare, several times to try to meet
"At first, they [the officials] said I should bring my mother's
national identity card, but when I did, they said there should be
an adult witness who is a relative," said Mapondera. "When
I brought my uncle, they said he should have the [same] surname
as my mother."
On her last visit, she managed to bring along her
mother's younger sister and even though they arrived in the morning
after the long trip, they had not been served by late afternoon.
"If Cynthia fails to get a birth certificate
this time, she might just as well forget about school and start
seriously thinking about getting married. We don't have the money
to keep on coming back, and buses are avoiding our roads because
the bridges are damaged," Mapondera's aunt, Jane, told IRIN.
Livestock
bribes
Another rural resident, Tazviona Chidziva, a village
headman, said officials also ask for bribes in the form of livestock
to help speed up the process.
"They never explain to us what documents we
should bring along and a lot of people have given up because of
the manner in which the officers do their work. Where I come from,
it is common to see a person of my age without a birth certificate
and life goes on," Chidziva told IRIN.
Zimbabwe has ratified the Convention of the African
Child which stipulates that children have a right to a name and
nationality, and makes it mandatory for governments to register
children immediately after birth.
However, the government is falling short of the
requirement, according to a recent Zimbabwe Multiple Indicator Monitoring
Survey for the year 2009 jointly conducted by the Zimbabwe National
Statistics Agency and the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF).
The survey indicated that only 30 percent of children
in rural areas managed to obtain birth certificates, while 55 percent
were registered in urban areas.
However, the registrar general, Tobaiwa Mudede,
was quoted in the state-run Herald newspaper as dismissing the report
"unreservedly", pointing out that the government had not
taken part in the survey.
*Not her real name
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