FOCUS IN SEARCH OF THE RIGHT TO BELONG The Zimbabwe Peace Project welcomed the move by government to embark on a nationwide blitz to reach out to Zimbabweans who needed critical national documents like birth and death certificates and national Identity Documents (IDs). The mobile process, which started on 1April and runs until September 30, this year, was long overdue considering that since 2020, when the COVID -19 pandemic hit, there has been limited operation of the Registrar General’s office, and there were restrictions of movements. The move by the RG’s department culminates from among other things, the concerns raised by ZPP in its research on access to documentation. A position paper was produced to analyse the inability of children born of irregular migrants to access birth certificates after their parents send them to Zimbabwe to be raised by their parents who are the grandparents of the children. The report, titled, ‘Cursed with Statelessness: Consequences of Deprivation of National Identification Documents,’ noted some of the following issues: The report found out that in areas near the borders of Zimbabwe, there was a high number of people migrating to neighbouring countries, leaving their children in the care of grandparents, who would not be able to acquire registration documents for them. In other cases, people migrated to other countries but would not regularize their stay there. This made it impossible for them to register any children they bore while living illegally in a foreign country. As a result, these illegal immigrants would send their children to Zimbabwe without any documentation. This posed challenges as the relatives who assume the care of those children did not have the capacity to acquire birth certificates for them. The other issue discovered is that of unregistered citizens born within Zimbabwe that were born to victims of Gukurahundi massacres. The findings were identified in Matobo districts, other areas of Matabeleland, and parts of Midlands provinces and in these areas, unregistered citizens appeared in two sub-groups, namely children of Gukurahundi victims and grandchildren of victims of post-Gukurahundi massacres. The study unearthed that though some of their parents are still alive, their national identity documents were burnt when their belongings were set on fire during Gukurahundi. "The other category is those citizens whose parents were killed or subject to enforced disappearances during Gukurahundi and did not have death certificates to assist in getting birth certificates for children of the deceased or disappeared parents," reads part of the ZPP report. The lack of birth and national documents prevent the affected from accessing a number of services. Unregistered individuals are also left with no right to vote or assume political leadership positions which all depend on a birth certificate that is inaccessible to them. The provisions of the Birth and Death Registration (BDR) Act and the regulations of the DRG require citizens to bring proof of death certificates of their parents, which is impossible for children of victims of Gukurahundi. ZPP indicated that the BDR Act is prohibitive, discriminatory, and disenfranchising as "it is impossible to produce a death certificate of a victim of Gukurahundi massacres and enforced disappearance." Although the state has offered grace to the victims of Gukurahundi to register free of charge, the victims are afraid and intimidated as noted in the ZPP report. 8

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