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Home » Locked out of childhood: Home Affairs faces legal challenge over birth registration backlog
Constitutional Law

Locked out of childhood: Home Affairs faces legal challenge over birth registration backlog

Civil society confronts a bureaucracy that denies more than a quarter-million children a legal start to life
Kennedy MudzuliBy Kennedy MudzuliJune 19, 2025No Comments
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Key Points

  • 258 000+ children face long delays in birth registration.
  • Legal action challenges Home Affairs’ systemic failures.
  • Children are denied basic rights like schooling and healthcare.

Every child’s right to a name, nationality, and legal identity is enshrined in South Africa’s Constitution. But for hundreds of thousands of children, this right exists only on paper.

Delays of two to seven years in the late registration of births have left families stranded, trapped in a bureaucratic maze where legal documents determine access to education, healthcare and dignity.

In Cape Town, a coalition of affected caregivers, mostly mothers, has stepped forward, supported by the Children’s Institute at the University of Cape Town and the Legal Resources Centre. Despite meeting all legal requirements under the Births and Deaths Registration Act, they’ve faced years of unresponsiveness from Home Affairs, repeated follow-ups, and in some cases, unlawful instructions to travel to other provinces to reapply.

On 17 June 2025, these families’ quiet suffering became a public reckoning. The coalition filed suit in the Western Cape High Court against the Department of Home Affairs, not only seeking birth certificates for 15 applicants but also demanding accountability for the 258 000 people stuck in the national registration backlog.

Home Affairs initially missed deadlines to oppose the suit and has since failed to meet court-imposed timelines. Attempts by the Children’s Institute to negotiate, offering to separate individual relief from systemic reform, were rejected.

Notably, since learning of the litigation, Home Affairs has begun interviews with the 15 applicants. Yet these sessions have raised red flags. Interviews allegedly pressured caregivers to admit to negligence, a tactic coercive in tone and legally unjustified. Ten out of the 15 applicants have now received birth certificates, leaving others still suspended in uncertainty.

Seeking dignity, not favour

Without birth certificates, children are refused school admission, denied social grants, and excluded from healthcare, even private medical aid. Some are asked to leave their schools or are barred from participating in school activities. Two of the caregivers cannot register their five children because they themselves lack birth certificates.

The litigants are asking the court to declare the backlog unconstitutional and to order corrective action. They are calling for a comprehensive root-cause analysis of the delays, the development of a clear, step-by-step plan to resolve the backlog, and the introduction of safeguards to prevent future administrative collapse.

Home Affairs Minister Dr Leon Schreiber.

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Kennedy Mudzuli

    Multiple award-winner with passion for news and training young journalists. Founder and editor of Conviction.co.za

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