Home Affairs on hoax article about DNA requirements for birth registration

Media statement regarding hoax online article on DNA requirements for birth registration

The Department of Home Affairs has noted a hoax article in the social media space purported to emanate from an interview conducted with Minister Malusi Gigaba pertaining to the introduction of compulsory DNA testing requirements for registration of new births.

We wish to categorically state that no such interview was ever conducted by the Minister with what appears to be a fake website. The department will utilise official communication platforms to create awareness around any changes in policy should there be such pronouncements, including those made by the Ministry.

To provide clarity on the matter, in 2014, we announced new Births and Deaths Regulations. In cases of children born out of wedlock, we have been aware of cases where single mothers get involved in relationships with non-South African men and approach Home Affairs offices to record these persons as fathers of their children even if they are not the biological fathers.

This is then used by such persons to address our department for permanent residence status in the country due to the right that children have to be cared for by their parents.

To this end, and where such a circumstance arises, we now require the results of paternity tests. This is applicable to non-South Africans.

Similarly, where there is an application by a third party to substitute his particulars as the father of a child and to effectively remove the recorded father’s name in the birth certificate, the regulations now provide that a paternity test must be submitted by the applicant.

In instances where the parents of a child born out of wedlock are both recorded in the system but their status is unmarried and recorded as such, upon marriage, and if they wish to change their marital status on the child’s profile, the law provides that this may be done without a requirement of a paternity test.

For media enquiries contact:
Thabo Mokgola
Cell: 060 962 4982 

Mayihlome Tshwete
Cell: 072 869 2477

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