Zimbabwe: ID nightmare for border communities

Published: 13/Aug/2019
Source: The Herald (Harare)

Cletus Mushanawani Mashonaland Central Bureau Chief

THE Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission has called for marginalised communities like the Doma people from Kanyemba in Mbire and other border areas to be assisted in obtaining identification documents.

Speaking at the end of the three-day public hearings on the National Inquiry on Access to National Documentation in Zimbabwe last week, the panel’s chairperson, Dr Ellen Sithole, said they had encountered peculiar cases that needed urgent address, especially among marginalised communities.

“The main challenges people are facing in accessing national documents include failure to meet the requirements for the renunciation of citizenship by so-called aliens, in particular the RTGS$5 000 being demanded by the Registrar-General’s Office,” she said.

The issue of poverty also came out strongly as people are failing to raise money to travel to the relevant offices to obtain birth certificates.

“It was also noted that there is limited service at sub-offices and mobile registration exercises leading to referrals to district and provincial offices especially with regards to passports and dual citizenship issues.

“We also noted that some people, especially orphans, complained of lack of birth confirmation records as a deterrent for them to obtain birth certificates. Some documents have wrongly recorded information such as sex of the child, wrong spellings and dates of birth. We encountered an issue where a date of birth was given as September 31, yet everyone knows that the month of September ends on the 30th.”

Read further: https://www.herald.co.zw/id-nightmare-for-border-communities/

Themes: Acquisition by children, Birth Registration, ID Documents and Passports
Regions: Zimbabwe
Year: 2019