CORRECTED-FEATURE-As Malawi issues IDs for children, privacy concerns rise

(Corrects pronoun to 'she' in paragraph 14)

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Malawi pushes to register 8.4 million under-16s

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IDs essential for education and healthcare access

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Lack of data protection law raises privacy fears

By Charles Pensulo

MWANZA, Malawi, Dec 27 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - W aiting in line to register his three children with the government for the first time, Malawian motorcycle taxi driver Nyadani Michael recalled the everyday problems caused by their lack of official identity papers.

"When you enrol them in school, they ask for a birth certificate or some age proof," said Michael, 30, as he queued up outside a classroom in the border town of Mwanza where the forms had to be submitted, holding the hand of his six-year-old daughter.

"One child also went missing near the house some years ago, and I had to file a police complaint. It was difficult because there was no form of identification for them," he added.

Until recently, many Malawians did not register their children's births. Michael only got his own national identity in 2018 as the government pushed to gather the biometrics of all adult Malawians and issue them identity cards.

Malawi adopted the National Registration Act in 2010, and enforced it in 2015, making it compulsory to register all births, deaths and marriages of adults older than 16.

Before that, most Malawians used their voter ID as their primary identification, getting a letter from their village chief attesting to their address and age to obtain a passport or driving licence. Millions of children were not registered.

Since 2017, when the Malawian government, with funding from the U.N. development agency (UNDP) and the European Union, began biometric registrations, more than 9 million adults - or about 90% of eligible adults - have been registered.

The exercise, aimed at improving delivery of services, governance and fostering economic and social inclusion, is part of the Digital Malawi project that sets out to link every citizen to a government database.

But a more recent government push from October to register some 8.4 million children below the age of 16 by 2023 has raised concerns about privacy and surveillance, with biometric data being collected and even newborns issued a unique ID number.

DATA PROTECTION

Biometrics are being captured and IDs being issued even as the country's data protection law is still being drafted, said Jimmy Kainja, who teaches media and communications at the University of Malawi, and researches digital rights and privacy.

"The problem is the registration push has come in the absence of robust data protection in Malawi ... We are doing all of this without any data protection for citizens," he said.