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Legal
Monitor - Issue 121
Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR)
November 28, 2011
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Women
score against Mudede
Zimbabwean women
have scored a major coup against a man forcing them to change their
identities.
Thanks to the
efforts of a brave woman, Fadeke Obatolu, Registrar General Tobaiwa
Mudede can no longer force married women to change their surnames
as a condition for acquiring birth certificates for their children.
A recent consent
order granted by High Court Judge Justice Martin Makonese means
that days are over when provincial registrars from Mudede's
office would refuse married women a chance to acquire birth certificates
for their children without changing their surnames to those of their
husbands.
"It is
an important ruling for women," said Sarudzayi Njerere, the
prominent human rights lawyer who helped Obatolu get the order.
Obatolu took
the matter to court after Mudede's officers turned her husband
away, stating Obatolu's failure to change her surname to her
husband's as the reason for refusing to register the couple's
newly born son.
The Attorney
General's Office, represented by Tinei Dodo, consented that
there was no legal basis for this action.
This resulted
in Justice Makonese declaring that:
- There is
no provision at law that compels married women to change their
surnames to those of their husbands.
- The First
Respondent (Mudede) shall not compel or require the Applicant
(Obatolu) to change her surname to that of her husband before
or after registering the birth of Applicant's child.
The joy of giving
birth to a baby boy on 7 August last year turned into bureaucratic
agony for Obatolu and her husband, Cowden Mutizwa, when the RG's
Office insisted on Obatolu, a Zimbabwean citizen, changing her surname
to Mutizwa.
Trouble started
when Cowden visited Mount Pleasant District Registry to procure
a birth certificate for his son.
"He was
advised to bring my national registration card. When he returned,
armed with my national registration card he was asked if I was a
citizen of Zimbabwe. I believe First Respondent is obliged to register
all births that occur in Zimbabwe notwithstanding the citizenship
of the mother," reads Obatolu's court application.
When Cowden
returned to the registry for the third time on 25 October last year,
two men, a Mr Marufu and Mr Zuze informed him that Obatolu had to
change her surname to Mutizwa "before the birth of the child
could be registered."
Two days later,
Obatolu went to Mount Pleasant District Registry and spoke to Marufu
and Zuze who stood by their stance that she changes her surname
first.
"I would
then have to apply for and obtain a new registration card and passport.
I would also have to change my banking cards. All my education certificates
and even my certification of registration as a legal practitioner
are in my surname. I can imagine the nightmare should I apply for
a job using a surname foisted upon me by First Respondent,"
said Obatolu in her application.
"I believe
I am, in terms of the Constitution,
entitled to equal protection of the law. The law gives me a right
to obtain a birth certificate for my son. The First Respondent is
unlawfully tampering with this right by trying to force me to assume
my husband's surname. The First Respondent has a constitutional
duty to discharge his functions in accordance with the law. I believe
he is in breach of his constitutional obligations not only to me
but to the masses of women whom he summarily compels to assume the
surnames of their husbands," said Obatolu in her application.
Obatolu's
victory will come as a major relief to married women who were being
turned away by Mudede's officers as they will now be able
to rely on this precedent.
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