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Only 43% of Children In Nigeria Have Birth Certificates — UNICEF

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UNICEF Borno

The United Nations Children’s Fund, UNICEF, has reported that only 43 per cent of Nigerian children are registered; thus, more than 50 per cent unregistered.

The body in a statement also noted that, globally, the births of 166 million children under five have never been recorded: “Children on the African continent have the lowest birth registration rate in the world, with only 44 per cent of children registered at birth and millions of deaths also go uncounted each year. Nigeria alone accounts for 11 per cent of unregistered children in West Africa.

“As Nigeria joins the rest of the world in commemorating Civil Registration and Vital Statistics Day today, it is addressing structural, normative and operational challenges to birth registration.

“Birth registration is a one-off event that gives every child a unique identity, which will give them better access to vital services like health, education, and social protection.”

“Every child counts – and we must ensure that we count every child so that they can best benefit from important services like health and education,” said Peter Hawkins, UNICEF Nigeria country representative.

“We need to work together to ensure effective coordination to make this happen. Functional systems that allow for the sharing of data across information management databases that are integrated with other vital services are necessary to push the birth registration rate in Nigeria up, and make sure every child is counted,” he said

The National Population Commission (NPC) has identified information and communication technology assets to support effective Civil Registration and Vital Statistics (CRVS) systems that are integrated with other governmental systems such as health and identity management. This will ensure the highest standards of data protection and confidentiality of personal data to promote birth registration among civil registration, health, and identity management systems.

“Every child has a right to a name, a nationality and a legal identity,” said Hawkins. “Working together, we can and must bring Nigeria to meeting its SDG obligation to provide a legal identify for all, including through birth registration.”

The NPC, in partnership with CRVS entities, and with support from UNICEF, co-created a Roadmap for Digital Universal Birth Registration in Nigeria. It lays out a clear vision, delineates the roles of different government agencies, builds the government’s capacity to deliver, formulates an action plan, sets a timetable and milestones, and optimizes the cost of the digital birth registration process in the country. All of this is in advance of the implementation deadline of the UN SDGs.

SDG Target 16.9 calls for governments, by 2030, to provide legal identity for all, including birth registration. The indicator for the target is the “proportion of children under five years of age whose births have been registered with a civil authority.”

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