Within sub-Saharan Africa, progress and levels vary widely. For example, Southern Africa leads with 88 per cent, while Western Africa has made the most significant gains over 15 years, reaching 63 per cent. Eastern Africa and Middle Africa trail behind, both at 41 per cent.
A new report
by UNICEF shows that over 500 million children globally, accounting for about 8
in 10 children under five have had their births registered in the last five
years.
The Right
Start in Life: Global levels and trends in birth registration, 2024 update released on Wednesday evening is the latest update on the number of children registered since
2019 when global levels stood at 75 per cent. Despite the increase to 77 per
cent today, the report shows 150 million children under five remain
unregistered and invisible to government systems.
The report
also reveals that over 50 million children whose births are recorded lack birth
certificates. This essential document serves as proof of registration and is
critical for acquiring nationality, preventing statelessness, and ensuring
children can enjoy their rights from birth.
“Birth
registration ensures children are immediately recognized under the law,
providing a foundation for protection from harm and exploitation, as well as
access to essential services like vaccines, healthcare, and education,” said UNICEF
Executive Director Catherine Russell. “
As UNICEF marks 78 years of championing
children’s rights today, we celebrate the progress made for millions of
children in gaining their right to a legal identity, while calling for stronger
efforts to ensure that every child, everywhere, is registered at birth.”
Global
progress has largely been driven by countries prioritizing timely registration,
leveraging health, social protection, and education systems, expanding services
to more locations, digitalizing the process, and eliminating fees.
Latin
America and the Caribbean reached 95 per cent, Eastern and South-Eastern Asia
94 per cent, and Central and Southern Asia 78 per cent. However, sub-Saharan
Africa lags significantly behind at 51 per cent, accounting for more than half
of the world’s unregistered children estimated at 90 million.
Within
sub-Saharan Africa, progress and levels vary widely. For example, Southern
Africa leads with 88 per cent, while Western Africa has made the most
significant gains over 15 years, reaching 63 per cent. Eastern Africa and
Middle Africa trail behind, both at 41 per cent.
However,
with slow improvements and a rapidly growing child population, UNICEF says
sub-Saharan Africa is poised to house the majority of the world's children
in the coming decades and could see over 100 million unregistered children after
2030 if levels remain as they are today.
In a
statement shared along with the report, the UN body notes that many families continue
to face barriers due to weak political commitment, long distances and multiple
visits to registration facilities, lack of knowledge about the registration
process, unaffordable fees and prohibitive indirect costs, and, in some places,
discrimination based on gender, ethnicity, or religion.
Despite
these challenges, some countries have made significant gains. In sub-Saharan
Africa, Botswana has achieved universal birth registration, while Côte d’Ivoire
has reached over 90 per cent. Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, and others have
also shown sustained improvement over the past decade.
Now, to ensure
every child is recognized and protected, UNICEF is calling for five key actions
including registering every child at birth, streamlining registration processes
to enhance service delivery and driving digital transformation in addition to implementing
key legal reforms for inclusive and equitable civil registration and vital
statistics systems.
“Despite progress, too many children remain
uncounted and unaccounted for—effectively invisible in the eyes of the
government or the law,” said Russell. “Every child has the right to be
registered and provided with a birth certificate so that they are recognized,
protected, and supported.”