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Most Africa, Asia kids are ‘invisible’: World Bank
More than 1.1 billion people worldwide officially don’t exist, going about their daily lives without proof of identity. The issue leaves a significant fraction of the global population deprived of health and education services.
Washington
Among these “invisible people”, many of whom live primarily in Africa and Asia, more than one third are children susceptible to violence whose births have not been registered, the World Bank’s “Identification for Development” (ID4D) programme recently warned.
The problem is particularly acute in geographical areas whose residents face poverty, discrimination, epidemics or armed conflicts. Vyjayanti Desai, who manages the ID4D program, said the issue arises from a number of factors, but cited the distance between people and government services in developing areas as major.
For populations near the Peruvian Amazon, for example, traveling to an administrative service can take some five days of transit by boat, according to Carolina Trivelli, Peru’s former development minister. Many families are also simply not informed about the importance of birth registration, and the consequences of non-registration, which can include the denial of basic rights and benefits, or an increased likelihood of marrying or entering into the labor force underage. And even if parents are aware of the need to declare a birth, costs can be crippling, said Anne-Sophie Lois, representative at the United Nations in Geneva and director of the children’s aid organization Plan International.
As a result, millions of children in Africa and Asia first encounter the administration only once they reach school age. But “birth certificates are often needed to enroll in school” or take national exams, Lois said.
In China, avoiding birth registration was also deliberate for years for fear of repercussions due to the one-child policy. Beyond being barred from attending school, these children can fall prey to violence ranging from forced labor for boys to early marriage for girls, denounced by UNICEF in a 2013 report. These children can also fall victim to human trafficking.
To combat this immense problem, organizations are patiently working on the ground to identify these “invisible” people.
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