THE births of about 17 million Nigerian children under the age of five are births registered, according to a new report on global birth registration released by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF).
Meanwhile, the number of children whose births are officially registered increased significantly from 30 per cent in 2013 to 43 per cent in 2018, as birth registration was integrated into health services.
UNICEF Representative in Nigeria, Peter Hawkins, noted yesterday that the 17 million unregistered children were unaccounted for and non-existent in the eyes of the government and the law.
He said, “Without proof of identity, children are often excluded from accessing education, healthcare and other vital services, and are vulnerable to exploitation and abuse.”
We have come a long way in Nigeria and ensuring that children are registered through the health services is making a big difference – but still, too many children are slipping through the cracks. He listed barriers to high registration coverage in Nigeria to include the operation of two parallel and competing systems for birth registration at federal and state levels, insufficient birth registrars, lack of public awareness on the importance of birth registration for children, coupled with ingrained social beliefs that do not encourage the registration of children.
Hawkins observed that “Worldwide, 166 million children under-five, or 1 in 4, remain unregistered, according to the new report Birth Registration for Every Child by 2030: Are we on track? – which analyses data from 174 countries and shows that the proportion of children under-five registered globally is up around 20 per cent from 10 years ago – increasing from 63 per cent to 75 per cent.
UNICEF Regional Director for West and Central Africa, Marie-Pierre Poirier said that birth registration in West and Central Africa remained stagnant for a long time, leaving millions of children without their basic right to a legal identity.
According to her, “This situation has now changed and millions of more children are registered at birth. In West and Central Africa, under-five registration increased in 10 years from 41 per cent to 51 per cent, despite the multiple challenges the region is facing”.
She stated that with UNICEF’s support and under the leadership of the African Union and of national governments, countries have invested in integrating birth registration in health and immunization platforms to extend the coverage and accessibility of services and reach even the most vulnerable populations.
“This simple shift in service delivery is not only low cost but effective in increasing national registration rates, contributing to progress in the region as a whole. Despite progress, the majority of countries in sub-Saharan Africa lag behind the rest of the world and some of the lowest levels of registration are found in Chad (12 per cent) and Guinea-Bissau (24 per cent)”, she added.
In Birth Registration for Every Child by 2030, UNICEF calls for five actions to protect all children: Provide every child with a certificate upon birth. Empower all parents, including single parents, regardless of gender, to register their children at birth and for free during the first year of life.
Link birth registration to basic services, particularly health, social protection and education, as an entry point for registration.
Invest in safe and innovative technological solutions to allow every child to be registered, including in hard-to-reach areas. Engage communities to demand birth registration for every child.
“Every child has a right to a name, a nationality and a legal identity,” said Peter Hawkins.
“We have just marked the 30th anniversary of these rights – as enshrined in the Convention on the Rights of the Child – and 2020 will mark the 30th anniversary of the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child – which provides that every child be registered immediately after birth. We must continue to register and not stop until every Nigerian child is registered – every child counts!”