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Government shows double standards on birth certificates

22 Aug 2018 - by Dave Marsh
Comments | 0

SOUTH African minors

will not benefit from an

intention to change the

immigration regulations

announced on July 24

by Derek Hanekom, SA

Minister of Tourism.

In a video recording

broadcast at the Satsa

conference on July 24,

the Minister said Cabinet

had agreed that, in the

interests of encouraging

families to tour SA,

foreign minors would be

treated differently when

they crossed SA’s borders.

A person close to the

Department of Tourism,

said that, although

there had been mixed.

messages coming out of

the Department of Home

Affairs, the plan was that

foreign minors who were

accompanied by both

parents would not have to

carry birth certificates.

Only in cases of those

not accompanied by

both parents might the

immigration officer require

such documentation.

But for South African

minors, a new passport

system is being introduced

where the names of both

parents are included in

a minor’s passport. SA

minors without the new

passport will need to

continue to carry a birth

certificate with the names

of both parents.

The new passport was

first announced in 2016,

but the DHA hasn’t made

progress in rolling this

out.

India, which tried the

system of listing both

parents’ names in

children’s passports, has

responded to women’s

lobby groups and recently

announced that it was

discontinuing the practice.

Otto de Vries, ceo of

Asata, said that having

different rules in place

made no sense. “How

can you have different

sets of rules that apply to

different nationalities?”

he asked. “Best practice

is best practice, so surely

that should be consistent,

regardless of whether the

children are South African

or not.”

From an inbound

perspective, Otto also

cautioned that, as the

requirement for minors to

travel with UBCs had been

in place for three years,

any change in regulations

would likely only confuse

the market and some

airlines could continue to

require unabridged birth

certificates for minors

before boarding them. 

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